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Test your basic knowledge |
Civil Engineering Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
engineering
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. The precipitation that cannot be absorbed by the soil and flows across the surface by gravity. The water that reaches a stream by traveling over the soil surface or falls directly into the stream channels - including not only the large permanent stre
Retention
Terminal Manhole
Surface Runoff
Rubble - Ordinary
2. Federal agency responsible for producing and managing many federally-funded public service programs - especially those affecting housing and public spaces.
Housing and Urban Development - Department of (HUD)
Collection System
Storm Sewer
Storm Water
3. Downward movement of the soil or of a structure which it supports
zoning
Settlement
Permeability
Clear Well
4. Sedimentation basin overflow weir. A plate with Vnotches along the top to ensure a uniform flow rate and avoid shortcircuiting.
Grade
Lateral Sewer
Laundering Weir
Curb inlet
5. A large - public park - often highly scenic and isolated belonging to and operated by the federal government.
national park
Sediment
Housing and Urban Development - Department of (HUD)
Lateral Sewer
6. Narrowly defined - the amount of countryside and/or city that can be taken in at a glance. Also - an area of land or water taken in the aggregate.
Capillary Action
Artificial Groundwater Table
Retention
landscape
7. An agency of the U.S. Department of the Interior charged with the planning and administration of all parks and monuments in the federal park system. The NPS is often referred to as the largest single employer of landscape architects in the United Sta
Wasteline Vent
Collection Main
National Park Service (NPS)
Trunk System
8. Any method of determining the weight a compacted material is able to support without damage or displacement. Usually stated in pounds per square foot.
environmental impact
Compaction Test
historic preservation
Curb Stop
9. A special valve with a hinged disc or flap that opens in the direction of normal flow and is forced shut when flows attempt to go in the reverse or opposite direction of normal flows.
Stratification
Sedimentation Basin
Check Valve
Settlement
10. The amount of runoff that reaches the point of measurement within a relatively short period of time after the occurrence of a storm or other form of precipitation. Also called 'direct runoff.'
drainage
Storm Runoff
Sedimentation
environmental design professions
11. A trained builder or installer of landscapes - retained to implement the plans of landscape architects.
Cross Braces
Axial Load
landscape contractor
Check Valve
12. A wall that resist horizontal forces applied in the plane of the wall.
Cross Braces
Overflow Manhole
Shear Wall
Combined Sewer
13. The natural elements with which landscape architects work - such as plant materials and the soil itself.
Balustrade
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
softscape
Capillary Action
14. The elements of supply inherent to an area that can be used to satisfy human needs - including air - soil - water - native vegetation - minerals and wildlife.
Aeration
International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA)
Roof Leader
natural resources
15. This landscape architecture specialization has evolved to encompass maintenance of a site in its present condition; conservation of a site as part of a larger area of historic importance; restoration of a site to a given date or quality; renovation o
Main Sewer
designed landscape
landscape architecture
historic preservation
16. Pertaining to groundwater - a well - or underground basin where the water is under a pressure greater than atmospheric and will rise above the level of its upper confining surface if given an opportunity to do so.
Subsidence
City Beautiful Movement
Artesian
Adsorption
17. A natural underground layer of porous - waterbearing materials (sand - gravel) usually capable of yielding a large amount or supply of water.
Forest Service
Gravity Flow
Aquifer
air rights
18. The prepared and compacted base on which a manhole is constructed.
landscape contractor
Manhole Bedding
multiple use
Storm Collection System
19. A sewer designed to carry both sanitary wastewaters and storm or surface water runoff.
Wastewater
Trunk Sewer
Combined System
Wasteline Vent
20. Narrowly defined - an extended view or prospect from a site which - many times - is as important as or more important than the site itself.
drainage
Lift Station
B T U
view
21. Masonry composed of roughly shaped stones - well bonded and brought at irregular intervals vertically to discontinuous but approximately level beds or courses.
Manhole Bedding
Rubble - Random
Bedding
easement
22. Sand - silt - gravel and rocks carried or washed into a collection system by infiltration water flows.
Lift Station
land trust
Infiltrated Debris
Equalizing Basin
23. Record of an area's natural and man-made resources - including vegetation - animal life - geological characteristics and mankind's presence in such forms as housing - highways and even hazardous wastes.
planned unit development (PUD)
Storm Water
Mail Line
environmental inventory
24. The running off of water from a land surface or subsurface - such as through sewers or natural means.
Secondary Treatment
Grade
Housing and Urban Development - Department of (HUD)
drainage
25. A sewer that discharges into a branch or other sewer and has no other common sewer tributary to it. Sometimes called a 'street sewer' because it collects wastewater from individual homes.
air rights
Infiltrated Debris
Groundwater
Lateral Sewer
26. OE The pressure at a specific elevation exerted by a body of water at rest - or _ In the case of groundwater - the pressure at a specific elevation due to the weight of water at higher levels in the same zone of saturation.
Baluster
land use
Splash Pad
Hydrostatic Pressure
27. Material used to provide a bedding or foundation for pipes or other underground structures. This material is of specified quality for desirable bedding or other characteristics and is often imported from a different location.
Select Bedding
Lateral Sewer
Wastewater Treatment Plant
conservation
28. Railing support at landings or other breaks in the stairs. If an angle post projects beyond the bottom of the strings - the ornamental detail formed at the bottom of the post is called the drop.
hardscape
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
conservation
Angle Post
29. A strip of unspoiled - often treed - agricultural or other outlying land used to separate or ring urban areas.
greenbelt
Housing and Urban Development - Department of (HUD)
environmental inventory
Lateral Sewer
30. In landscape architecture - a study of the potential cost of site purchase - demolition and improvement in comparison to the income or other benefit to be derived from site development.
Deadend Manhole
cost-benefit analysis
Earth Shift
Interconnector
31. A legal means of protecting beautiful views and associated aesthetic quality along a site by restricting change in existing features without government approval.
grade
scenic easement
Rubble - Ordinary
CADD
32. The lowest point of the channel inside a pipe - conduit - or canal.
parkway
Bearing
Invert
Weir
33. A pipe or conduit (sewer) intended to carry wastewater or waterborne wastes from homes - businesses - and industries to the POTW (Publicly Owned Treatment Works). Storm water runoff or unpolluted water should be collected and transported in a separat
Oxidation Ditch
Manhole
Potable Water
Sanitary Sewer
34. Broken stones - boulders - or other materials placed compactly or irregularly on levees or dikes for the protection of earth surfaces against the erosive action of waves.
Groundwater
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Lateral Sewer
Riprap
35. A plan for conserving or protecting various natural or manufactured resources. Such a plan is used as a management tool in making decisions regarding soil - water - vegetation - manufactured objects and other resources at a particular site.
Impermeable
conservation plan
Invert
Water Table
36. A professional who designs - plans - and manages outdoor spaces ranging from entire ecosystems to residential sites and whose media include natural and built elements; also referred to as a designer - planner - consultant. Not to be confused with lan
Wastewater Treatment Plant
land trust
landscape architect
Infiltrated Debris
37. A groundwater table that is changed by artificial means. Examples of activities that artificially raise the level of a groundwater table include agricultural irrigation - dams and excessive sewer line exfiltration. A groundwater table can be artifici
Retention
environmental design professions
Artificial Groundwater Table
Collection System
38. Vertical member supporting the railing.
manipulation of space
Rubble - Coursed
Baluster
Shear Wall
39. A record of each person involved in the handling and possession of a sample from the person who collected the sample to the person who analyzed the sample in the laboratory and to the person who witnessed disposal of the sample.
Angle of Repose
Backfill
base plan
Chain of Custody
40. A septic tank or other holding tank which serves as a temporary wastewater storage reservoir for a Septic Tank Effluent Pump (STEP) system. See SEPTIC TANK.
Interconnector
Liquefaction
Interceptor
American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA)
41. Subsurface water in the saturation zone from which wells and springs are fed. In a strict sense the term applies only to water below the water table. Also called 'phreatic water' and 'plerotic water.'
Groundwater
Infiltrated Debris
Supersaturated
Sewer
42. A manhole located at the upstream end of a sewer and having no inlet pipe. Also called a TERMINAL MANHOLE.
Surcharge
Hydrostatic Pressure
Vault
Deadend Manhole
43. A break in a lateral pipe somewhere between the sewer main and the building connection.
Selector
parkway
Lateral Break
Bearing
44. The change to an area's natural resources - including animal and plant life - resulting from use by man. Some projects may require conducting of an 'environmental impact study' before development can proceed.
Permeability
environmental impact
topography
National Park Service (NPS)
45. The pipeline extending from the water main to the building served or to the consumer's system.
Backfill
Bedding
Service Pipe
Hydrostatic Pressure
46. A groundwater table that has seasonal changes in depth or elevation.
Acidic
Manifold
Seasonal Water Table
Handhole Trap
47. A branch of biology dealing with the relationship between living things and their environment.
Sedimentation
agronomy
ecology
Cross Braces
48. A legal form of land-use control and building regulations usually exercised by a municipal authority; usually involves setting aside of distinct land areas for specific purposes - such as commercial - educational or residential development.
landscape architecture registration
Baluster
zoning
air rights
49. A coordinating agency formed in 1961 for state boards that administer licensing exams and maintain records for landscape architects to practice.
Day Tank
drainage
reclamation
Council of Landscape Architecture Registration Boards (CLARB)
50. A community's used water and water carried solids (including used water from industrial processes) that flow to a treatment plant. Storm water - surface water - and groundwater infiltration also may be included in the wastewater that enters a wastewa
Aquifer
Nonpotable
Axial Load
Wastewater