Home

Construct

Construct is a term used as both a verb and a noun, with meanings centered on building, forming, or devising. The word comes from Latin construere, meaning to pile up or assemble. As a verb, to construct means to place together parts to form a whole, to build, or to devise a plan or theory. As a noun, a construct can be something that has been built or put together, or an idea or concept formed through mental effort.

In philosophy and social sciences, a social construct refers to a concept whose perceived reality depends on

In computing and programming, construct often appears in two related senses. A constructor is a special method

Constructs also appear in other domains, including architecture, engineering, and linguistics, where the term broadly denotes

collective
human
agreement
rather
than
an
inherent
nature,
such
as
gender
roles,
social
norms,
or
money.
In
mathematics
and
logic,
a
construct
can
denote
an
object
defined
by
explicit
construction,
as
in
constructive
proofs
where
existence
is
demonstrated
by
constructing
an
example
rather
than
by
nonconstructive
arguments.
or
routine
that
creates
and
initializes
an
object
or
data
structure.
Language
constructs
refer
to
fundamental
features
provided
by
a
programming
language,
such
as
loops,
conditionals,
or
data
types,
used
to
build
a
program.
something
formed
by
combining
parts
according
to
a
plan.
See
also
construction,
constructive,
social
construct,
and
constructibility.