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The phrase "all too accurately" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation where something is described or represented in a way that is excessively precise or true, often with a negative connotation.
Example: "The report reflected the current state of the economy all too accurately, highlighting the struggles many families are facing."
Alternatives: "painfully accurately" or "excessively accurately".
Exact(11)
"It remains a horrifying scene that captures all too accurately the escalating rhythm of violence and the imaginative barrenness of youths who assume that babies are simply animals devoid of feeling," he says.
It remains a horrifying scene that captures all too accurately the escalating rhythm of violence and the imaginative barrenness of youths who assume that babies are simply animals devoid of feeling.
But it is also partly because of a caricature idea of the plays all too accurately summed up by Tyrone Guthrie in A Life in the Theatre: "High thinking takes place in a world of dark-crimson serge tablecloths with chenille hobbles, black horsehair sofas, wall brackets and huge intellectual women in raincoats and rubbers".
Hepburn pushed hard to get the studio to risk making O'Neill's "Mourning Becomes Electra" — even for her, though, Mayer stopped at incest — and then settled into the likes of Pearl Buck's "Dragon Seed," a film all too accurately described as a "Not-So-Good Earth".
A Radio Liberty newsman, Andrei Babitsky, reported all too accurately about continued Russian casualties in Chechnya.
The New York Times reported all too accurately that "a senior Bush administration official appeared to close the matter, saying F.B.I. and C.I.A. analysts had firmly concluded that no meeting had occurred".
Similar(48)
Mr F lies about his occupation because "to describe too accurately what he actually did every day would seem grotesque".
They yearned for something different, something apart from what was too accurately called, by the mid-1980s, classic rock.
After an hour's absorbing tennis, Murray pocketed the first set to love, serving too big and too accurately for Djokovic.
"We have to laugh it off because the Beatles were iconic," Payne demurred once, slightly too accurately, when asked by Australia's Sunday Telegraph about the resemblance.
I am quickly discovering that over Christmas, there are more arranged parties and gatherings for sixth-formers than you can shake a Ucas form at. "Dad, you're turning into Scrooge," he says, rather too accurately.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com