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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Archival

Archival \Ar"chi*val\, a. Pertaining to, or contained in, archives or records.
--Tooke.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
archival

1800; see archives + -al (1). Related: Archivally.

Wiktionary
archival

a. 1 Of or pertaining to an archive or archiving. 2 Of a quality suited to the conservational needs of an archive.

WordNet
archival

adj. of or relating to or contained in or serving as an archive

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "archival".

I knew, as a historian, that the order of any archival find is an important part of its lesson.

I draw from that money once a month, to pay for the rented rooms, the archival fees, the meals in restaurants.

And now, having been truly bitten by the archival bug, by the past, she had to bring herself back to the twentieth century and go to lunch.

The men of Ares were so very body-oriented, so very out-of-doorsy, so very much into tramping and swimming and climbing, and overall heartiness, so very much unaccustomed to sedentary pursuits that they did not consider the possibility of archival technology.

Long gone Web pages cached by the likes of Google and Alexa constitute the first tier of such archival undertaking.

This, naturally, is only a private case of the archival potential of the Net.

Guatemalan expert David Stoll of Middlebury College, who examined archival material and interviewed survivors of the events described by Menchu.

Long gone Web pages cached by the likes of Google and Alexa constitute the first tier of such archival undertaking.

This, naturally, is only a private case of the archival potential of the Net.

Holding the bag before him like a sacred offering, Langdon walked to the center of the vault where he found the customary glass-topped archival exam table.

Langdon motioned beside Vittoria to a tray filled with stainless-steel archival tools.

Then, like an enormous expiring beast, the archival complex went totally black.

T he internal organization of Archival Vault 10 was not as intuitive as Langdon had hoped, and the Diagramma manuscript did not appear to be located with other similar Galilean publications.

The Mentat philosopher had chewed deep into everything they accepted and what he disgorged did not agree with Archival dependence upon "our inviolate summations.

Madam Dupuis had arranged for them to use Archival records to match numbers with names, providing they limited their inquiries to that.