Culvert vs Tailwater - What's the difference?
culvert | tailwater |
A transverse channel under a road or railway for the draining of water.
* 1922, , Vintage Classics, paperback edition, page 91
* 1996 , , Virago Press, paperback edition, page 167
The water located immediately downstream from a hydraulic structure, such as a dam, bridge, or culvert.
*{{quote-news, year=2008, date=May 27, author=Peter Kaminsky, title=Rules for Reservoirs Pose Threat to Trout Population, work=New York Times
, passage=Like the more renowned Missouri and Henry’s Fork of Montana and Idaho, it is a tailwater fishery; that is, it owes its remarkable fecundity and its population of big wild trout to the cold-water outflow of reservoir impoundment. }}
As nouns the difference between culvert and tailwater
is that culvert is a transverse channel under a road or railway for the draining of water while tailwater is the water located immediately downstream from a hydraulic structure, such as a dam, bridge, or culvert.As a verb culvert
is to channel (a stream of water) through a.culvert
English
Noun
(en noun)- A raft of twigs stayed upon a stone, suddenly detached itself, and floated towards the culvert .
- After she left, I ran away for a day, and hid myself, solitary, in a culvert under the railway lines.
tailwater
English
Noun
citation