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constitute
[kon-sti-toot, -tyoot]
verb (used with object)
to compose; form.
mortar constituted of lime and sand.
to appoint to an office or function; make or create.
He was constituted treasurer.
to establish (laws, an institution, etc.).
Synonyms: commission, instituteto give legal form to (an assembly, court, etc.).
to create or be tantamount to.
Imports constitute a challenge to local goods.
Archaic., to set or place.
constitute
/ ˈkɒnstɪˌtjuːt /
verb
to make up; form; compose
the people who constitute a jury
to appoint to an office or function
a legally constituted officer
to set up (a school or other institution) formally; found
law to give legal form to (a court, assembly, etc)
obsolete, law to set up or enact (a law)
Other Word Forms
- constituter noun
- constitutor noun
- nonconstituted adjective
- preconstitute verb (used with object)
- self-constituted adjective
- self-constituting adjective
- unconstituted adjective
- well-constituted adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of constitute1
Word History and Origins
Origin of constitute1
Example Sentences
District Judge William Alsup of San Francisco ruled in June that Anthropic’s use of the books to train the AI models constituted “fair use,” so it wasn’t illegal.
Each of Monguia’s remarks “constituted an abuse of authority” and violated the judicial rules of conduct, according to the commission’s statement on the findings.
The problem, of course, is what constitutes a “reasonable conservative Democrat.”
The PA, which governs areas of the West Bank not under full Israeli control, said Smotrich's plan constituted a "direct threat" to hopes for a Palestinian state.
Hamas denounced what it called the "operations of systematic destruction" by Israeli forces in Gaza City, saying they constituted "an unprecedented violation" of international law.
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