The Collaborative International Dictionary
Constructional \Con*struc"tion*al\, a. Pertaining to, or deduced from, construction or interpretation.
Wiktionary
a. Of, pertaining to, or obtained by construction.
Usage examples of "constructional".
Could one call "scientific progress" a situation in which intellectual, creative, cognitive, and constructional activities were so specialized that in each profession one dug deeper in an ever-narrower plot of ground?
But here, on the Starship, he believed he had constructed one of his most satisfying constructional ironies: Titania's Secret Chamber, her central intelligence core, was located in the very middle of the great Central Dome.
Then she would lead the guests to their rooms, which, through some constructional quirk common to every inn, were always at the end of a long, dark corridor.
II and IX (originally a continuous narrative, but divided for obvious constructional reasons) and devising a legend to provide for the separation of Aragorn from Gandalf, and his disappearance and unexpected return, I was probably more influenced by the important element ER (in Elvish) = 'one, single, alone'.
Those explosions didn't just cripple The Lady, they showed up every design fault and constructional weakness of the current model and damn near blew these boys' careers away!
The Devonshire Mansion, a bright edifice of eleven storeys in the Foster and Dicksee style, constructional ironwork by Homan, lifts by Waygood, decorations by Waring, and terra-cotta by the rood, is situate on the edge of Hyde Park.