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Dictionary
imprecise.
adjective
Not precise or exact; containing some error or uncertainty.
Exact(60)
TechCrunch's Josh Constine explains Instagram's issue: the site "has '300 million monthly users', but that's an imprecise statistic encompassing some who hardly check it.
She's been methodical, responsive, elusive, exact, polite, imprecise.
They have been criticised for imprecise bombing and for a naval blockade which has stopped almost all fuel and food reaching the country.
Much of the rest was mushy and imprecise.
Economic tonic An imprecise catastrophe Slow bicycle race Paying through the mouse Slackers or pace-setters?
Such an exercise is doomed to be imprecise.
Measuring tree cover on a global scale is an imprecise science.
This system has been contested by the Spanish right, but Spain's constitutional court has upheld the policy.Furthermore, you were imprecise about the financial architecture behind the Spanish system of autonomous communities.
Their big, breezy thoughts made great, but imprecise reading.
But many are now calling for an automatic alert to be sent in such circumstances, so that ground authorities know that they should start tracking the plane with conventional radar.The ACARS has at least provided information about the jet's continued path, albeit wildly imprecise.
They were maverick, furious and stridently political, though sometimes wonderfully imprecise in their aim.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com