Constituent in a sentence as a noun

My job was to answer and return constituent emails and calls.

I will say for their pitch deck, they are representing their cat loving constituent well.

Their vote recommendation will be, in part, based on constituent sentiment.

But either way, it would be crazy to assume they're fixed relative to how long or hard their constituent items are.

If they got members in parlament, you could actually vote yourself online, and the MP would just vote based on the constituent votes.

I'd like to see a law that government offices can only have an internet connection as fast as the slowest constituent.

Im just in love with the idea of a constituent being able to send their state senator a pull request.-------I find this quote fascinating.

A tool like GitHub could also make it easier for constituents to track and even voice their opinions on changes to complex legal code.

These are automatically generated functions which can be used to build a value of a type from its constituent parts.

Constituent in a sentence as an adjective

We've split out the stdlib into many constituent libraries that depend on each other, and then just made the stdlib a convenient facade for these libraries.

Many of these societies, even some of the Federation constituent societies, appear to use their own currencies or means of exchange.

On a physical level, death is just something that bodies do at some point before their constituent matter and energy goes off to do other things in the universe.

Training is physical activity done with a longer-term goal in mind, the constituent workouts of which are specifically designed to produce that goal.

The skills that programmers have: being able to decompose problems into constituent parts, apply reasoning to solve those sub-problems, and combine the solutions into a working whole, are skills that can be leveraged in any facet of life.

Under the current corruption-facilitating system, a politician that pisses off donors or party leadership by putting constituent's interests first can be safely challenged from within his own party without the party risking the loss of the seat.

But if the bulk of your legislative activity is doing things like voting to repeal Obamacare twenty-three times, as Rep. Justin Amash did in 2011-2012, then I would argue you are just politically pandering to your constituent base -- or worse, your campaign's financial donors -- and not governing.

Although I applaud the efforts here, as a former staffer and intern for a congressman, I hate to be the bearer of bad news...The truth is my job as an intern, as was the job of all other interns that I met while in DC, was to take constituent calls and also open constituent mail.

Constituent definitions

noun

an artifact that is one of the individual parts of which a composite entity is made up; especially a part that can be separated from or attached to a system; "spare components for cars"; "a component or constituent element of a system"

See also: component element

noun

a member of a constituency; a citizen who is represented in a government by officials for whom he or she votes; "needs continued support by constituents to be re-elected"

noun

something determined in relation to something that includes it; "he wanted to feel a part of something bigger than himself"; "I read a portion of the manuscript"; "the smaller component is hard to reach"; "the animal constituent of plankton"

See also: part portion component

noun

(grammar) a word or phrase or clause forming part of a larger grammatical construction

noun

an abstract part of something; "jealousy was a component of his character"; "two constituents of a musical composition are melody and harmony"; "the grammatical elements of a sentence"; "a key factor in her success"; "humor: an effective ingredient of a speech"

See also: component element factor ingredient

adjective

constitutional in the structure of something (especially your physical makeup)

See also: constitutional organic