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constructive

adjective

  1. promoting positive improvement or development, affirmative,
L227669 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /kənˈstɹʌktɪv/

adj

Etymology: From Latin cōnstrūctīvus. By surface analysis, construct + -ive.

  1. Relating to or causing construction.
  2. Carefully considered and meant to be helpful.
  3. Serving a useful purpose.
  4. Deemed after the fact to exist or to have occurred, despite the formal process not having been followed; often when there was no intention to do so at the time.

    constructive dismissal

    constructive notice

  5. Not direct or expressed, but inferred.

    A President's power begins slipping away the moment it is known that he is going to leave: I had seen that in 1952, in 1960, in 1968. On the eve of my resignation I knew that my role was already a symbolic one, and that Gerald Ford's was now the constructive one. My telephone calls and meetings and decisions were now parts of a prescribed ritual aimed at making peace with the past; his calls, his meetings, and his decisions were already the ones that would shape America's future.

constructive — meaning, definition (adjective) · Vinony