Yes, "tarmac" is an eponym derived from "tarmacadam," which is named after the Scottish engineer John Loudon McAdam. He developed a method for constructing roads using crushed stone and tar. The term has since become commonly used to refer to paved surfaces, particularly airport runways and roads, even though it originally referred to a specific type of road construction.
Romulus is the eponym of Rome
Is odyssey a eponym or a toponym
The Edsil automobile was the eponym of Henry Ford's son.
Eponym
Julius Cesar is the eponym for the month of July.
no
no
eponym
Like York, PA or New York, NY for the Duke of York ... or Pennsylvania for William Penn ...
Tarmac Limited was created in 1903.
Tarmac Limited's population is 12,500.
If we didn't have Tarmac roads the roads would be bumpy and dusty, the dust would go in to the air and cause people to cough and could cause crashes. The inventor of Tarmac is Edgar Hooley he invented Tarmac in 1902. Tarmac is heated and then poured on to road.