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revetment
[ ri-vet-muhnt ]
noun
- a facing of masonry or the like, especially for protecting an embankment.
- an ornamental facing, as on a common masonry wall, of marble, face brick, tiles, etc.
revetment
/ rɪˈvɛtmənt /
noun
- a facing of stones, sandbags, etc, to protect a wall, embankment, or earthworks
- another name for retaining wall
Word History and Origins
Origin of revetment1
Word History and Origins
Origin of revetment1
Example Sentences
"As far as I'm aware, those train tracks were built in 1973 to support the building of the coast protection structures - the timber revetments which go along the cliffs, but also the groynes," he said.
Crews removed about 3,000 feet of levee and revetment — a barrier that slows erosion — built in the 1960s and 1970s.
Other measures include timber revetments or seawalls to slow erosion.
The first, found medieval timber structures thought to represent waterfront revetments, with a wall that runs alongside the medieval location of the riverside.
As part of efforts to defend the castle 5,000 tonnes of granite boulders have been put in place to form a barrier, or "revetment".
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