I agree with Terrasouth, the term "crusher run" means ungraded "stuff" (my term, for lack of a better one) right of the chute. In the northeast of the USA, you will also hear "bank run" and "bank run gravel" used synonymously.
But I disagree with Terrasouth, a graded aggregate is not always needed, and if you are talking about the bottom of an unlined stormwater management basin, the material is almost never spec'd - unless filtration is required, then it must be.
Typically, I write "suitable fill" and "unsuitable fill" into specs. This material applies to areas where structural characteristics and contact with U/G utilities are not of concern...like the bottom of a basin, for example.
Suitable fill is simply dirt, with some general qualifiers: 0% over 2" stone within 24" of pipes, 0% over 8" stone, 20% max 1/2" stone, no topsoil, organic matter, construction debris, cinders or frozen material. The ability to meet a compaction spec is sometimes required, which pretty much leaves out all the above anyway.
Unsuitable fill is purposely not defined. It simply allows for the A/E inspector to reject fill; presumably for not meeting Suitable Fill criteria, but the reason is not specified or limited. Replacement is by Suitable Fill.
Cvg has the right idea, but (again, because of the use), I would not want to mess around with a sample, unless I had a reason to think what I would get is Unsuitable. And I doubt the quarry has test reports on bank run, but maybe they do. I've just never seen any.
Remember: The Chinese ideogram for “crisis” is comprised of the characters for “danger” and “opportunity.”
-Steve