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social construct

American  
[soh-shuhl kon-struhkt] / ˈsoʊ ʃəl ˈkɒn strʌkt /

noun

  1. a complex concept or practice shared by a society or group, not arising from any natural or innate source but built on the assumptions upheld, usually tacitly, by its members.

    The Green Party supports the EU in viewing disability as a social construct and recognizes the well-established link between poverty and disability.


Etymology

Origin of social construct

First recorded in 1900–05

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Nancy Berns, a professor at Drake University, has done a lot of great work on closure and how it’s a social construct.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 26, 2024

That kind of points to something that was unmeasured—something about being in this social construct, of being categorized as Black or Hispanic in the U.S., that is contributing to this difference.

From Scientific American • Jun. 29, 2023

While researchers say sex generally refers to physiological characteristics and gender is more a social construct, when it comes to federal civil rights law, they are essentially the same.

From Reuters • May 19, 2023

Bed Bath is a story about calcification, sure, but it is also a story about money being a social construct and people spending it in ways that do not make sense.

From Slate • Apr. 24, 2023

It always felt like they had something better to do, and that unlike the rest of us, they understood that high school was an unnecessary social construct.

From "Americanized" by Sara Saedi