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Wiktionary
structurally

adv. In a structural manner.

WordNet
structurally

adv. with respect to structure; "structurally, the organization is healthy"

Usage examples of "structurally".

So polychlorinated biphenyl and polychlorinated dibenzodioxin are structurally similar compounds.

Structurally, the political career undertaken by Isky Harappa transforms the novel from family chronicle to political satire and darkens its black comedy to the point of apocalypse.

From infancy to puberty, the body and its individual organs, structurally as well as functionally, are in a state of gradual and progressive evolution.

The Rebels inspected what floors remained and were considered to be structurally safe.

In the beginning the Home Guard was a heterogeneous force and structurally rather similar to the early Spanish militias, but it has been gradually brigaded on the lines of the regular army, and all the ordinary contingents are affiliated to the regiments belonging to the locality.

For example, on the atomic level of organization, hydrogen, the first element to be synthesized in the processes of cosmic evolution, is structurally simpler than the subsequently synthesized, heavier elements.

Their apparently ineffectual bodies were deceptive for the Glan were structurally twice as strong as Lotharians and equal to their scaly space neighbors, the Ertois.

Rather, the coherency of its agency (autonomy), structurally coupled with other communing agencies, enacts a worldspace mutually codetermined.

Bones preserve the signs of fractures and breaks even after they heal because the new material that fills in the cracks, called callus, is structurally different from the original.

True, you can't lift off-planet on c-v drive, and a ship has to be structurally reinforced.

He maintained that among other faculties of the Antis they had the ability to structurally strengthen and stabilize a normal force field by means of some sort of physical catalytic emanations.

Structurally because of the Herculean construction efforts that had gone into rebuilding and shoring it up with hardened steel, representatively because of the great awakening that was occurring in the nation despite the circumstances.

Descartes may have meant his metaphor to be precise, as structurally accurate a descriptor of the brain and its processes as Harvey's of the heart as a pump, but I suggest we can take it as no more and no less than poetic, a way of thinking about a complex human phenomenon which places it not sui generis but as merely one amongst other types of matter in motion.