Engineering[r]: a branch of engineering that uses chemistry, biology, physics, and math to solve problems involving fuel, drugs, food, and many other products. [e]
Architecture[r]: The art and technique of designing and constructing buildings to fulfill both practical and aesthetic purposes. [e]
Mechanical engineering[r]: The branch of engineering concerned with the utilisation of the basic laws of mathematics, thermodynamics, fluid dynamics, and system dynamics in order to create unique solutions to physical problems. [e]
Construction equipment[r]: Equipment, which may be mobile, semipermanent, or permanent, intended for heavy work such as earthmoving, lifting containers or materials, drilling holes in earth or rock, or concrete or paving application [e]
Dissolved air flotation[r]: A device for separating and removing suspended oil or solids from wastewaters. [e]
Pavement[r]: A stone or tile structure which can serve as a floor or an external feature, or a paved path for pedestrians that is usually situated alongside a road. [e]
Bridge (civil engineering)[r]: A structure to take a road, railroad, footpath, conveyer belt, or other structure over an unpassable obstacle, such as water, a deep trench, etc. [e]
Land surveying[r]: The practice of precise measurement, especially of the earth and features on, above or below the earth's surface. Includes many specialized fields of measurement, such as bathymetry, photogrammetry, and geodesy[e]
Chemical engineering[r]: a branch of engineering that uses chemistry, biology, physics, and math to solve problems involving fuel, drugs, food, and many other products [e]