Construct vs Formulate - What's the difference?
construct | formulate |
Something constructed from parts.
A concept or model.
To build or form (something) by assembling parts.
Similarly, to build (a sentence, an argument, etc.) by arranging words or ideas.
* (Marita Sturken)
(geometry) To draw (a geometric figure) by following precise specifications and using geometric tools and techniques.
To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression.
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In transitive terms the difference between construct and formulate
is that construct is similarly, to build (a sentence, an argument, etc.) by arranging words or ideas while formulate is to reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression.As a noun construct
is something constructed from parts.construct
English
Noun
(en noun)- The artwork was a construct of wire and tubes.
- Loops and conditional statements are constructs in computer programming.
- Bohr's theoretical construct of the atom was soon superseded by quantum mechanics.
Synonyms
* (something constructed from parts ): construction * (concept, model ): concept, idea, model, notion, representationVerb
(en verb)- We constructed the radio from spares.
- A sentence may be constructed with a subject, verb and object.
- The Vietnam War films are forms of memory that function to provide collective rememberings, to construct history, and to subsume within them the experience of the veterans.
- Construct a circle that touches each vertex of the given triangle.
Synonyms
* (build or form by assembling parts' ): assemble, build, form, make, produce, put together * (build (a sentence or argument) ): form * (draw (a geometric figure) ):Antonyms
* (build or form by assembling parts ): destroy, disassemble, dismantle, ruin, wreck, take apartDerived terms
* reconstructExternal links
* * * (Construct) English heteronymsformulate
English
(Webster 1913)Verb
- Another source of evidence supporting the conclusion that children learn language by formulating a set of rules comes from the errors'' that they produce. A case in point are overgeneralized past tense forms like ''comed'', ''goed'', ''seed'', ''buyed'', ''bringed , etc. frequently used by young children. [...]
