of or relating to structure; relating or essential to a structure.
resulting from or relating to political or economic structure: structural reforms to the social safety net;structural inequalities;structural racism.
Biology. relating to organic structure; morphological.
Geology. of or relating to geological structure, as of rock or strata.
Chemistry. relating to or showing the arrangement or mode of attachment of the atoms that constitute a molecule of a substance.Compare structural formula.
of, relating to, or based on the assumption that the elements of a field of study are naturally arranged in a systematic structure: structural grammar.
If you find a problem there, you’ll have to make deep structural changes in your content marketing approach.
Content marketing fails: How to analyze and improve|Michael Doer|August 27, 2020|Search Engine Watch
In a report published last week by the Oxford Internet Institute, researchers found that one of the most common traps organizations fall into when implementing algorithms is the belief that they will fix really complex structural issues.
The UK exam debacle reminds us that algorithms can’t fix broken systems|Karen Hao|August 20, 2020|MIT Technology Review
She also wants training for staff on bias and structural racism.
‘Educate, Not Indoctrinate’: Anti-Racism Push in Coronado Schools Fuels Backlash|Ashly McGlone|August 18, 2020|Voice of San Diego
D’Arcy also conceded to New Scientist that there is some concern that the acid treatment might affect the integrity of the bricks, to the extent that they might not be able to make up the main structural components of a building.
Scientists Found a Way to Turn Bricks Into Batteries|Edd Gent|August 17, 2020|Singularity Hub
There’s a lot of data on how structural biology has come into its own in this pandemic.
We Don’t Have to Despair - Issue 88: Love & Sex|Robert Bazell|August 12, 2020|Nautilus
Nor do these studies address the structural and systematic issues that contribute to obesity, such as poverty and stress.
Why Your New Year’s Diet Will Fail|Carrie Arnold|December 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Common sense is not a just a normative judgment about wisdom, but a structural feature of any functioning organization.
Red Tape Is Strangling Good Samaritans|Philip K. Howard|December 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Sadly, the end of the Cold War has given license to structural decay.
Stock Market America and the Rest of Us|Lloyd Green|July 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
At the structural level, I was impressed with the variety and range of oversight mechanisms in place.
Here’s Who Should Watch the Watchmen|Geoffrey R. Stone|April 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST
How do structural brain changes correlate with emotional and behavioral symptoms?
Study Says Half of Jailed NYC Teens Have History of Brain Injury|Dr. Anand Veeravagu, MD, Tej Azad|April 22, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Functional and structural troubles of the stomach are certainly very intimately associated.
A System of Practical Medicine By American Authors, Vol. II|Various
The capillitium, however, in its structural details and habit of growth, is widely different.
The North American Slime-Moulds|Thomas H. (Thomas Huston) MacBride
The pronephros is distinguished from the mesonephros by developmental as well as structural features.
The Works of Francis Maitland Balfour, Volume III (of 4)|Francis Maitland Balfour
The late fifteenth-century Gothic additions consist of pinnacles and gables of no structural value.
Venice and its Story|Thomas Okey
This kind of steel is used for structural purposes, for rails, and for nearly all large steel articles.
An Elementary Study of Chemistry|William McPherson
British Dictionary definitions for structural
structural
/ (ˈstrʌktʃərəl) /
adjective
of, relating to, or having structure or a structure
of, relating to, or forming part of the structure of a building
of or relating to the structure and deformation of rocks and other features of the earth's crust
of or relating to the structure of organisms; morphological
chemof, concerned with, caused by, or involving the arrangement of atoms in molecules