noun, verb, -tured, -tur⋅ing.| 1. | mode of building, construction, or organization; arrangement of parts, elements, or constituents: a pyramidal structure. |
| 2. | something built or constructed, as a building, bridge, or dam. |
| 3. | a complex system considered from the point of view of the whole rather than of any single part: the structure of modern science. |
| 4. | anything composed of parts arranged together in some way; an organization. |
| 5. | the relationship or organization of the component parts of a work of art or literature: the structure of a poem. |
| 6. | Biology. mode of organization; construction and arrangement of tissues, parts, or organs. |
| 7. | Geology.
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| 8. | Chemistry. the manner in which atoms in a molecule are joined to each other, esp. in organic chemistry where molecular arrangement is represented by a diagram or model. |
| 9. | Sociology.
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| 10. | the pattern of organization of a language as a whole or of arrangements of linguistic units, as phonemes, morphemes or tagmemes, within larger units. |
| 11. | to give a structure, organization, or arrangement to; construct a systematic framework for. |
structure struc·ture (strŭk'chər)
n.
The arrangement or formation of the tissues, organs, or other parts of an organism.
A tissue, an organ, or other formation made up of different but related parts.