[ UK /ɪnˈækjʊɹəsi/ ]
[ US /ˌɪˈnækjɝəsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of being inaccurate and having errors
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How To Use inaccuracy In A Sentence

  • Some cars have computers that calculate this for you, but these are prone to inaccuracy.
  • It seems to me that that is not an argument in justification of inaccuracy, assuming that there is inaccuracy.
  • His soldierly dislike of inaccuracy overtook his discretion. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • But he couldn't discount that inaccuracy of testing -- largely due to interobserver discordance in reading the percentage of cells that stain positive for the receptors -- could be playing a role as well. MedPageToday.com - medical news plus CME for physicians
  • Your typical correspondent carps about a mistranslation, a geographical inaccuracy, an obscure word obscurely misused.
  • NFA series noise factor meter has low instrument inaccuracy to be spent surely, this conduces to manufacturer undertaking to component accurate, reduplicative is measured.
  • The computation of logarithms had made him aware of the inaccuracy of human calculation around 1812.
  • I’m leery of it in some ways, because part of my issue with the inaccuracy of cisgender is that it privileges gender identification more than anything. Yet another trans 101, in which Helen tells cis people What’s What
  • It deals with facts rather than judgments; in journalistic usage, a correction sets right an inaccuracy.
  • Imprecise language is a breeding ground for inaccuracy, and can be easily avoided.
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