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The phrase 'might exactly be' is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to express a possibility or likelihood that something is true. For example, "The answer to this question might exactly be what we're looking for."
Exact(2)
True, none of these battle-ready political adversaries might exactly be described as Stoics, including the noblest Roman of them all, Brutus, played with a radiantly open face by Paterson Joseph.
This might exactly be the strategy used in cats, leading to a patchy pattern of ocular dominance columns.
Similar(57)
It might not exactly be a laugh riot, but you'd be hard pressed to find anything that's quite as life-affirming.
While that explanation might not exactly be palatable to the Western mind, magic is very real in Cambodia. .
While that explanation might not exactly be palatable to the Western mind, magic is very real in Cambodia.
While this might not exactly be a technical move, her timing with the bass drop is impeccable.
Of course, a union-less future might not exactly be devoid of workers' groups vaguely devoted to something resembling solidarity.
Iftikhar allowed that to settle in for a moment, then broke into a grin – a subtle acknowledgement that the diet might not exactly be healthy for the birds.
Though her acting chops might not exactly be Oscar Award-worthy, it barely matters American Horror Story has never really been known for its nuance, anyway.
The crowd might not exactly be rolling around laughing at your skits.
Just what the Turks might do, exactly, is a matter of speculation.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com