Construct
1construct — con‧struct [kənˈstrʌkt] verb [transitive] 1. PROPERTY to build houses, apartments, offices, factories, roads etc: • It was the world s costliest hotel to construct at an estimated $1 million a room. 2. MANUFACTURING to manufacture things… …
2Construct — Con*struct (k[o^]n*str[u^]kt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Constructed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Constructing}.] [L. constructus, p. p. of construere to bring together, to construct; con + struere to pile up, set in order. See {Structure}, and cf.… …
3Construct — Con struct, a. Formed by, or relating to, construction, interpretation, or inference. [1913 Webster] {Construct form} or {Construct state} (Heb. Gram.), that of a noun used before another which has the genitive relation to it. [1913 Webster] …
4Construct — Développeur Scirra Environnem …
5construct — index build (construct), compose, create, devise (invent), establish (launch), forge (produce) …
6construct — I. transitive verb Etymology: Latin constructus, past participle of construere, from com + struere to build more at structure Date: 1663 1. to make or form by combining or arranging parts or elements ; build; also contrive, devise 2. to draw (a… …
7construct — 1. noun /ˈkɒn.stɹʌkt,ˈkɑnstɹʌkt,kənˈstɹʌkt/ a) Something constructed from parts. The artwork was a construct of wire and tubes. b) A concept or model. Bohrs theoretical construct of the atom was soon superseded by quantum mechanics. Syn …
8construct — The combination of a bone graft, metal instrumentation, prosthetic devices and/or bone cement applied to a specific level of the spinal column in the …
9construct — verb Construct is used with these nouns as the object: ↑argument, ↑barricade, ↑bomb, ↑building, ↑canal, ↑dam, ↑dock, ↑facility, ↑garage, ↑graph, ↑hypothesis, ↑ …
10Construct Classic — Construct Пользовательский интерфейс Construct …