Exact(2)
These genotype phenotype correlations may not have been seen in some previous studies because the diagnosis of mtDNA depletion syndrome is frequently imprecise.
Second, the language of policy discourse is frequently imprecise and open to multiple interpretations, so that how policy is forged in the practice of health organisations and professionals - what Lipsky has termed 'street level bureaucracy' [ 54] - requires careful scrutiny.
Similar(58)
One's language being frequently imprecise in such ways, I have discovered.
A majority say that what they read is frequently ineffective because it's too long, poorly organized, unclear, filled with jargon, and imprecise.
For example, an international study from 2000 onwards has shown that out of 83 countries having cause-of-death registration, only 20 countries had high-quality death registration data that could be used for estimating injury mortality, because elsewhere, injury deaths were frequently classified using imprecise, partially specified categories (Bhalla et al. 2010).
The designations softwood, hardwood, and broadleaf, however, are often imprecise.
That is too imprecise.
It is an imprecise analogy.
But the term "youth" is notoriously imprecise.
"We know it is an imprecise system.
Risk assessment is an imprecise art.
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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