(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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The study of how objects move without analyzing the forces that cause the motion.
Kinematics
The study of how forces like weight and pressure affect structures and whether they remain stable and safe.
Structural Analysis
A device made of several parts that uses energy to perform work or make a task easier.
Machine
A device that converts energy, such as chemical fuel energy, into mechanical motion.
Energy Conversion
A rotating mechanical device that captures energy from moving fluid or steam to generate power.
Turbine
The study of how heat, temperature, and energy interact and transfer within systems.
Thermodynamics
A tightly fitted moving component inside an engine cylinder that moves up and down to create motion.
Piston
The ability of a structure or machine to remain balanced and not collapse under force.
Stability
The internal force that occurs within a material when it experiences a load or pressure.
Stress
An engine where fuel burns outside the engine to produce heat that creates steam or pressure to power machinery.
External Combustion Engine
The ability to understand, build, repair, and operate machines and mechanical systems.
Mechanical Skills
The weight or force that a structure or mechanical part must support.
Load
One of the first motorized vehicles built by Henry Ford in 1896, powered by an engine and designed with four bicycle-style wheels.
Quadricycle
Energy storage devices that supply electrical power to machines such as electric vehicles.
Battery Systems
Designing smaller engines that use less fuel while still providing enough power.
Engine Downsizing
A branch of physics that studies extremely small particles whose behavior can be unpredictable.
Quantum Mechanics
Energy sources used instead of fossil fuels, such as electricity, hydrogen, or biofuels.
Alternative Fuels
The automobile introduced by Henry Ford in 1908 that became the first mass-produced, affordable car for everyday consumers.
Model T
An industrialist and mechanical innovator who created the Model T automobile and popularized the assembly line to make cars affordable for many people.
Henry Ford
The measure of disorder or randomness in a physical system.
Entropy
The chemical reaction of burning fuel with oxygen that releases heat and energy.
Combustion
An engine where fuel burns inside the engine cylinder to create pressure that moves pistons and powers machines like cars.
Internal Combustion Engine
The study of motion of objects using predictable laws of physics such as Newton’s laws of motion.
Classical Mechanics
The lowest possible temperature where molecular motion nearly stops.
Absolute Zero
An advanced college degree (such as a master’s or doctorate) often required for research or university teaching in engineering.
Graduate Degree
A manufacturing method where products move through stations and workers perform specific tasks to build items quickly and efficiently.
Assembly Line
The study of the properties, design, and use of materials such as metals, plastics, and ceramics.
Materials Science
The branch of engineering that designs, builds, and improves machines and mechanical systems that use energy to perform work.
Mechanical Engineering
The ability of a substance, such as fuel, to evaporate quickly.
Volatility