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The phrase "are not very precise" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the clarity or accuracy of information, statements, or measurements.
Example: "The instructions provided are not very precise, leading to confusion among the team members."
Alternatives: "lack clarity" or "are somewhat vague".
Exact(23)
The condition is poorly understood and somewhat vaguely defined, so estimates are not very precise.
However, the estimates are not very precise.
Thus, although attractive, it is unclear that the mini-fluid challenge is reliable, especially when performed with techniques estimating cardiac output that are not very precise.
Their findings suggest that women who received VR have higher employment rates than those who did not receive training, but their estimates are not very precise.
Nevertheless, one must admit that these measurements are not very precise, such that small but significant increases in cardiac preload might be missed.
There are methods where you can say something about the geographical area a specimen might have come from, but they are not very precise.
Similar(37)
Even if you knew the camera's top data speed, finding a card that matches that speed would be tough to do because card speed measurements aren't very precise.
He said: "I don't think we as a government should start bandying around estimates, estimates which at the moment aren't very precise".
But those dates aren't very precise, largely because the concentrations of the trace elements used in the dating techniques are extremely low, says Lars Borg, a planetary scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory California.
"We aren't very precise with our statistics in Iraq.
They were not very precise..
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com