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Test your basic knowledge |
Carpentry Wood And Lumber Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
industries
,
carpentry
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Lumber usually 8' or more in width and less than 2' thick.
Board
Wane
Quarter-sawed
Juvenile wood
2. A type of warp in which the edge of a lumber is not straight.
Air-dried
Wane
Timber
Crook
3. A method of sawing lumber that produces flat grain.
Cambium layer
Plain-sawed
Annular rings
Green lumber
4. Trees that shed leaves each year.
Coniferous
Deciduous
Fiber-saturation point
Moisture meter
5. A layer just inside the bark of a tree where new cells are formed.
First and seconds
Bow
Plain-sawed
Cambium layer
6. The outer part of a tree just beneath the bark containing active cells.
Kiln-dried
Timber
Cambium layer
Sapwood
7. The wood of broad-leaved dictyledonous trees (as distinguished from the wood of conifers).
Hardwoods
Shake
Board
Softwood
8. A volume of wood that measures 1' square and 1' thick or any equivalent lumber volume.
Lumber
Board foot
Wane
Shake
9. Lumber dried by placing it in huge ovens called kilns.
Juvenile wood
Annular rings
Kiln-dried
Sapwood
10. Numbers and letters used to rank wood according to quality.
Lumber grades
Sapwood
Grade
First and seconds
11. Lumber that has been dried to a suitable moisture content.
Knots
Fiber-saturation point
Dimension lumber
Seasoned lumber
12. The wood in the inner part of a tree - usually darker and containing inactive cells.
Heartwood
Lumber
Twist
Shake
13. A type of warp in which the side of a board is curved from edge to edge.
Hardwoods
Wane
Softwood
Cup
14. A defect in lumber caused by cutting through a branch of limb embedded in the log.
Deciduous
Lumber grades
Knots
Lumber
15. The natural glue in wood that holds together the wood cells and fibers.
Lignin
Warp
Knots
Heartwood
16. The natural glue in wood that holds together the wood cells and fibers.
Pitch pocket
Lignin
No. 1 common
Softwood
17. A person whose job is to cut logs into lumber.
Sawyer
Twist
Lignin
Heartwood
18. The point at which the moisture content of wood is equal to the moisture content of the surrounding air.
Kiln-dried
Moisture meter
Coniferous
Equilibrium moisture content
19. The wood of broad-leaved dictyledonous trees (as distinguished from the wood of conifers).
Moisture meter
Deciduous
Hardwoods
Fiber-saturation point
20. The best grade of hardwood lumber.
No. 1 common
Moisture content
Coniferous
First and seconds
21. A layer just inside the bark of a tree where new cells are formed.
Board foot
No. 1 common
Cambium layer
Equilibrium moisture content
22. The portion of wood that contains the first seven to fifteen growth rings of a log. They are located in the pith.
Annular rings
Pith
Juvenile wood
Quarter-sawed
23. Machine that makes moldings or a thin strip placed between layers of lumber to create an air space for drying.
Pith
Lignin
Lignin
Stickering
24. The level of the ground: also identifies the quality of the lumber.
Kiln-dried
Grade
Deciduous
Heartwood
25. Machine that makes moldings or a thin strip placed between layers of lumber to create an air space for drying.
Stickering
Timber
Medullary ray
Lignin
26. Large pieces of lumber over 5' in thickness and width.
Sawyer
Stickering
Timber
Plain-sawed
27. A volume of wood that measures 1' square and 1' thick or any equivalent lumber volume.
Juvenile wood
Grade
Seasoned lumber
Board foot
28. Cone bearing tree; also known as evergreen tree.
Wane
Coniferous
Sapwood
Plain-sawed
29. Any deviation from straightness in a piece of lumber.
Plain-sawed
Lumber
Warp
Lignin
30. Lumber that has been seasoned by drying in the air.
Air-dried
Dimension lumber
Coniferous
Wane
31. Wood from coniferous (cone-bearing) trees.
Softwood
Moisture content
Lignin
Twist
32. The small - soft core at the center of a tree.
Shake
Lumber grades
Heartwood
Pith
33. A method of sawing lumber parallel to the medullary rays to produce edge-grain lumber.
Warp
Deciduous
Bow
Quarter-sawed
34. The wood in the inner part of a tree - usually darker and containing inactive cells.
Heartwood
Moisture meter
No. 1 common
Fiber-saturation point
35. Bands of cells radiating from the cambium layer to the pith of a tree to transport nourishment toward the center.
Pith
Medullary ray
Wane
Warp
36. Any deviation from straightness in a piece of lumber.
Warp
Pitch pocket
Hardwoods
Bow
37. Wood that is cut from the log to form boards - planks - and timbers.
Hardwoods
Fiber-saturation point
First and seconds
Lumber
38. Lumber that has been dried to a suitable moisture content.
No. 1 common
Seasoned lumber
Timber
Wane
39. The point at which the moisture content of wood is equal to the moisture content of the surrounding air.
Equilibrium moisture content
Dimension lumber
Moisture content
First and seconds
40. The amount of moisture in wood expressed as a percentage of the dry weight.
Moisture content
Twist
Deciduous
Timber
41. The moisture content of wood when the cell cavities are empty but the cell walls are still saturated.
Moisture meter
Air-dried
Fiber-saturation point
Green lumber
42. An opening in lumber between annular rings containing pitch in either liquid or solid form.
Cup
Pitch pocket
Crook
Plain-sawed
43. Wood used for framing having a nominal thickness of 2'
Stickering
Shake
Dimension lumber
Heartwood
44. Lumber defect in wood.
Pitch pocket
Twist
Deciduous
Lignin
45. The portion of wood that contains the first seven to fifteen growth rings of a log. They are located in the pith.
Wane
Juvenile wood
Cambium layer
Warp
46. A lower grade of hardwood lumber.
Lignin
No. 1 common
Dimension lumber
Medullary ray
47. The rings seen when viewing a cross-section of a tree trunk; each ring constitutes one year of tree growth.
Plain-sawed
First and seconds
Pith
Annular rings
48. A method of sawing lumber parallel to the medullary rays to produce edge-grain lumber.
First and seconds
Wane
Lignin
Quarter-sawed
49. Lumber usually 8' or more in width and less than 2' thick.
Board
Stickering
Bow
Twist
50. A method of sawing lumber that produces flat grain.
Pitch pocket
First and seconds
Plain-sawed
Fiber-saturation point