functional
/ˈfʌŋkʃənl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈfʌŋkʃənl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈfəŋ(k)-sh(ə-)nəl/ (ame, mw)
functional — adjective
- functionalpositive
- more functionalcomparative
- most functionalsuperlative
1. Made or chosen because it does its job well and is useful, without extra decorat
Made or chosen because it does its job well and is useful, without extra decoration or fancy details.
The kitchen design is simple and functional, with plenty of storage and easy-to-clean surfaces.
functional design: useful rather than decorative
Wren chose a functional backpack with large pockets instead of a trendy leather bag.
The waiting-room furniture is purely functional and not meant to be comfortable.
For mountain hiking you need functional clothing that keeps you warm and dry.
The new office building has a clean, functional look with no unnecessary ornaments.
- practical
more common in everyday speech; emphasises sensible, convenient design
- utilitarian
more formal; stresses that beauty was not a design goal
- serviceable
suggests something is adequate for its purpose but not impressive
- decorative
made mainly to look attractive
- ornamental
exists purely for visual appeal
- fashionable
chosen because it is currently popular, not because it works well
文法句型
functional + noun
be + functional
用法筆記
In this sense, functional contrasts with decorative or fashionable. The word is neutral or approving — it suggests the item does exactly what it was made for.
常見錯誤
2. (Of a machine, piece of equipment, or system) working correctly and able to be u
(Of a machine, piece of equipment, or system) working correctly and able to be used as it should be.
The heating system is now fully functional after the plumber fixed the broken pipe.
fully functional: working correctly
The old elevator is still functional, though it makes a strange clicking sound.
During the blackout the emergency radio remained functional because of its backup batteries.
The factory cannot reopen until every safety system is confirmed functional.
Christopher bought a used dishwasher that is still fully functional despite a scratched door.
- working
less formal; more common in spoken English
- operative
formal, often used in official reports or medicine
- in service
used for vehicles or large equipment available for use
- broken
damaged so that it does not work at all
- out of order
temporarily not working, often of public machines
文法句型
be + functional
fully / partially / still functional
functional + noun (machine, system)
用法筆記
Commonly paired with adverbs such as fully, still, no longer, and barely. Often used in technical or maintenance contexts to report the status of equipment.
常見錯誤
3. Describing a person who has an addiction or mental condition but still manages t
Describing a person who has an addiction or mental condition but still manages to hold a job, keep relationships, and appear normal in daily life.
Tamar is a functional professional who manages her sales job despite her anxiety disorder.
functional + professional / person: manages life despite a condition
Many functional alcoholics drink heavily at night but arrive at work on time every morning.
The therapist said a functional addict is someone whose daily routines are not obviously disrupted.
Ziad was a functional heroin user for years before his office noticed anything unusual.
- high-functioning
more common in clinical descriptions; suggests a higher level of daily competence
- highly functional
similar but slightly less clinical
- non-functional
unable to manage daily life due to addiction or condition
文法句型
functional + noun (person with addiction or condition)
用法筆記
Often appears in the compound 'high-functioning' (e.g., 'high-functioning autism'). This is a clinical observation, not a judgment — being functional does not mean the person is healthy, only that they can get through daily tasks.
常見錯誤
4. Relating to the basic practical abilities that a person needs to get by in every
Relating to the basic practical abilities that a person needs to get by in everyday life, such as reading, writing, using numbers, or speaking a language.
The adult education programme teaches functional skills like reading timetables and filling out forms.
functional skills: basic practical abilities for daily life
Functional illiteracy means a person cannot read well enough to understand medicine labels or signs.
Sumin took a course to improve her functional English for talking with customers at work.
The exam tests functional mathematics, such as calculating discounts or measuring ingredients.
- academic
relating to study and theory rather than everyday use
文法句型
functional + noun (skill, literacy, mathematics, English)
用法筆記
Often found in educational titles: 'functional literacy,' 'functional numeracy,' 'functional skills.' These are formal categories in adult education and government training programmes. The sense treats language or math as a tool for real tasks, not for academic study.
常見錯誤
5. Concerned with how something works, operates, or is organised — focusing on the
Concerned with how something works, operates, or is organised — focusing on the purpose and activities of each part rather than its physical form.
The engineers prepared a functional analysis of the bridge before finalising the blueprints.
functional analysis: study of how something works
Hoa's job title is functional manager of the company's IT support team.
The two departments have different functional roles — one does sales and the other handles customer service.
A functional chart of the organisation shows who reports to whom based on job duties.
- operational
more common in business contexts; 'operational issues' vs 'functional requirements'
- working
simpler but less precise for formal analysis
- procedural
focuses on steps and processes rather than overall purpose
- structural
relating to the physical arrangement or organisational hierarchy
- aesthetic
relating to beauty and appearance
文法句型
functional + noun (analysis, design, role, structure)
用法筆記
This sense overlaps with 'functional' in business, engineering, and IT. It describes the purpose-driven aspect of something as opposed to its physical layout (structural) or appearance (aesthetic). For example, 'functional requirements' list what a system must do, not how it looks.
常見錯誤
6. Relating to what people do with words — for example, apologising, making request
Relating to what people do with words — for example, apologising, making requests, giving advice, or refusing an offer — rather than focusing on grammar rules or vocabulary lists.
The textbook groups expressions by functional categories such as making requests and giving opinions.
functional categories: language grouped by purpose
Students practise functional language for ordering food at a restaurant or booking a hotel room.
Functional language teaching focuses on what learners need to say in real conversations.
Léa found that functional phrases like 'I am sorry to interrupt' helped her communicate more naturally.
- communicative
broader term for language teaching that emphasises real communication
- pragmatic
academic term for the study of language in use
文法句型
functional + noun (language, category, skill, approach)
用法筆記
This sense is most common in language teaching (ELT / TEFL). 'Functional language' contrasts with 'grammatical structures' — a functional syllabus is organised around communicative purposes (e.g., apologising, inviting, declining) rather than grammar points.
常見錯誤
7. (In medicine or biology) relating to how a body part, organ, or system performs
(In medicine or biology) relating to how a body part, organ, or system performs its job, as opposed to its physical structure — often used when symptoms exist without visible tissue damage.
The patient was diagnosed with a functional disorder — her symptoms were real but no physical damage was found.
functional disorder: symptoms without structural damage
The cardiologist explained the difference between a structural heart defect and a functional heart problem.
After her stroke, Kemi worked with a therapist to regain functional abilities like walking and speaking.
Doctors use functional tests to check how well a patient's lungs take in oxygen during exercise.
- physiological
broader term for body function; less common in the 'no structural cause' sense
- non-organic
explicitly states no physical tissue damage is present
- structural
relating to the physical form or tissue of a body part
- organic
resulting from detectable physical changes in the body
文法句型
functional + noun (disorder, symptom, problem, ability)
用法筆記
In medicine, 'functional' contrasts with 'structural' or 'organic.' A 'functional disorder' (e.g., irritable bowel syndrome) shows symptoms without detectable physical changes. In biology, 'functional morphology' studies how body parts work. Do not use this sense for everyday health complaints — it is a clinical distinction.