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Discover LudwigThe phrase "much precise" is not correct in written English.
The correct phrase is "much more precise". For example, you can say: "The new machine operates much more precisely than the old one."
Exact(5)
George Melly, a fellow Surrealist and close friend, would continue to wonder out loud at the way that Burra's fused paw became "an unlikely instrument of so much precise beauty".
The group also played his "Samba for Carmen" and "A Lo Tristano," but all three used a little too much precise homage in the game of combining Latin and jazz music.
Except for a very few dances (none excerpted on Saturday) when Mr. Cunningham has put his dancers in heeled shoes, this company has always performed barefoot, and no other modern-dance style gives the dancers' feet as much precise articulation, as much strength and as much finely textured beauty as ballet can offer.
The discovery that so much precise history over inconceivable stretches of time is encapsulated in the 23 chromosomes we all have has shattered the philosophical foundations of biology and given rise to ethical debates that are bound to reshape politics in the years ahead.
The results could inform prescription and adjustment of wheelchair lever propulsion mechanisms, making them easier and much precise.
Similar(55)
Much more precise.
Ms. Pericet was much more precise.
But real markets are much more precise.
Much more precise medicine is possible.
You have to be much more precise and bloody pedantic.
But recently the technique has become much more precise.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com