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Procedural Common

Origin: Latin suffix -al

Procedural has 4 different meanings across 1 category:

Adjective

Definitions
Noun
1

A type of literature, film, or television program involving a sequence of technical detail.

"The documentary was highly procedural, spending minutes explaining every step of the forensic investigation."

In plain English: Procedural refers to something that is based on following specific steps or rules rather than relying on personal feelings or creativity.

"The procedural was followed to ensure every witness could testify without interruption."

Usage: Use the noun form to describe media that prioritizes step-by-step instructions over narrative drama, such as instructional videos or documentary segments on complex tasks. This term distinguishes content focused on methodology from stories driven by character development and plot twists.

Adjective
1

of or relating to procedure

"a procedural violation"

2

relating to court practice and procedure as opposed to the principles of law

"adjective law"

3

Related to procedure.

"The procedural rules require all evidence to be submitted before the hearing begins."

Example Sentences
"The procedural was followed to ensure every witness could testify without interruption." noun
"The procedural was too long to read during the waiting period." noun
"He spent his lunch break reviewing the procedural for the new policy." noun
"Without the procedural, the meeting could not officially begin." noun
Related Terms
Antonyms
essential

Origin

The word procedural comes from combining procedure with the suffix -al. It entered English to describe anything related to a specific method or course of action.

Rhyming Words
ral tral ural oral gral aral kral aural jural loral acral moral dural meral sural boral rural coral feral viral
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