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The phrase "a precise point of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific location, detail, or aspect of a subject that is clearly defined or exact.
Example: "The research aims to identify a precise point of interest in the study of climate change."
Alternatives: "an exact location of" or "a specific aspect of".
Exact(2)
"The fact that there's two of us making the work," said Dinos, "means there can't be a precise point of departure.
The film, Smith says, hits "a precise point of fascination and contention among Americans".
Similar(58)
Although we were unable to provide a precise point estimate of Ne in this study, we can conclude that the Ne for the migrant peregrine falcon population is unlikely to be smaller than 500.
When we conclude summarily that an allowable exposure would yield a precise point estimate of, for example, no more than 1-in-10,000 excess cancer risk, we know that many individuals will instead face a risk of 1-in-1,000, or even higher.
The argument has a precise point in the case of tests or experiments with known error probability (the probability of rejecting a true hypothesis or of accepting a false hypothesis) but it applies quite generally: Tests of hypotheses about drug toxicity may and should have less chance of going wrong than those about the quality of a "lot of machine-stamped belt buckles".
Commentators dispute the precise point-of-no-return: a week, nine days, twelve days and a fortnight are the most common theses.Some attempted to apply the rule to Andrew Mitchell, until Friday the government's chief whip.
The primate's brain will automatically try to categorize a face as familiar, and at a precise point it will switch its perception of which of the two individuals it is seeing.
Further, especially with degraded stimuli, conscious perception may not be an all-or-none phenomenon, but a continuum of clarity unfolding in time [6], [10], [15], so that the notion of a precise point in time at which the conscious sensation pops out may be too simplistic.
Note that we are not suggesting to take the saturation of perceptual awareness as the temporal marker of the perceptual delay; Rather, its gradual buildup suggests that the notion of a precise point in time where conscious perception is realized may be too strict, at least with our degraded motion stimuli.
2 Neither side, however, can point to a definitive interpretation of the precise point of state law at issue.
"There's really no other way". In one of its many new applications, Dr. Kelly uses stereotactic surgery to find tumors and destroy them with a laser beam aimed at the precise point of growth.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com