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.
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  • 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.
  • There is at least one factual inaccuracy and - worse - more than a suggestion that he accepted whatever Scottish Enterprise told him.
  • Any inaccuracy in weekly measurements and subsequent payments to subcontractors will be translated directly into both the financial and cost accounts.
  • It further concerns me that the select committee also states there are concerns about the inaccuracy of the translation, and that macrons have been used in an inconsistent manner.
  • The documentable inaccuracy of surgeons' predictions has led to the use of computerized scheduling systems that provide OR schedulers with more accurate predictions of procedure durations.
  • This inaccuracy comes from the fact that the prices of goods and services do not reflect the so-called externalities, or as I would term them, more accurately, the hidden costs. May « 2009 « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website
  • As a journalist you simply cannot tolerate inaccuracy.
  • The original design had to be changed when an inaccuracy was discovered in the topographic survey.
  • Pulling and dragging was too commonplace, passes were misdirected and inaccuracy reared its head frequently.
  • It is because data is incomplete and not because of software inaccuracy that we have had problems.
  • The students, who wrote the script for the video, according to its description on YouTube, also point out what they describe as a factual inaccuracy in Emanuel's portrayal of the city's charters. High Schoolers Attack Rahm On Education Policy
  • You accused me of inaccuracy yet you can't spell "Middlesex".
  • The writer is guilty of bias and inaccuracy.
  • Second, it is widely agreed that the best way of balancing freedom of speech on the one hand with protecting the public from inaccuracy and intrusion on the other is through self-regulation.
  • The computation of logarithms had made him aware of the inaccuracy of human calculation around 1812.
  • Recording errors contributed significantly to inaccuracy. 9.
  • The Times corrections culture seems to revel in correcting every misspelling, transposed digit, historical inaccuracy, and boner.
  • Ever since literary criticism expanded to include online chatter on the web, writers have been on their guard against the piranhas of the web, who feast on every inaccuracy and gang up shamelessly for the kill.
  • In the Julian calendar, the solstice had fallen on 6 January, but because of its inaccuracy the date ‘moved’ back to 25 December.
  • Delayed recognition of cancer as a result of inaccuracy or inefficiency may also lead to increases in distress and disability for the patient, in addition to the eventual need for more radical treatment.
  • Such a weapon could be therefore used with accurate delivery against hardened targets, or with moderate inaccuracy against unprotected targets.
  • We as readers would then be meant to understand that Matthew and Raoul possess an extralinguistic or predeclarative selfhood that is expressed by their narrative presentation - with varying degrees of inaccuracy or deception.
  • That one scaremongering piece of inaccuracy aside, the lack of coverage is still remarkable.
  • The question may well become one of the degree of unfairness or inaccuracy, and the reason why unfairness and inaccuracy has crept in.
  • Owing, however, to the inevitable inaccuracy of all the time-records, these different zones intrude on one another, and the coseismal lines have therefore to be drawn about half-way through the overlapping regions, special weight being attributed to the apparently more accurate observations. A Study of Recent Earthquakes
  • What is, in your judgment, the biggest mistake or inaccuracy that the president and general is making about the situation here?
  • I am not asking you to debate the accuracy or inaccuracy of that proposition of law.
  • One puzzling inaccuracy pervades the prints in this show, including those by the usually reliable Sadahide: While the Caucasian men are depicted sporting racial markers like facial hair, roundish eyes and broad gestures, the women invariably have Asian features. How Japan Saw Us
  • The provision of statistics which can be used without fear of inaccuracy or without controversy as to their neutrality is a need in Canada which can well be supplied by our Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The Resultant of Forces
  • His play has been an infelicitous concoction of ingenuity and inaccuracy, the latter being generally fatal at this elite level. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bear in mind that working from memory is one of the most common causes of journalistic inaccuracy.
  • Bishko used this discovery to draw important conclusions about the nature of the Historia Silense, but he dismissed the inaccuracy itself as merely the error of an ignorant scribe.
  • The common misidentification of the book as an historical account has resulted in it being wrongly criticized for its supposed historical inaccuracy, while its merits as imaginative literature have been overlooked.
  • In 2001 only 24 percent of all complaints to the PCC about the media were brought relating to privacy - the rest are mainly for inaccuracy.
  • In no instance, therefore, in the illustrations of inaccuracy given in the preceding pages, is there any imputation of perverse and intentional inveracity. An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals
  • The inaccuracy, not specifically rebutted, was 'likely to have contributed to an atmosphere of distrust between the community and police'. Times, Sunday Times
  • If there's inaccuracy in these, it's measurement error, rather than some hoked-up numbers like Burt's .... Balkinization
  • Should a tape recording be permitted it would not provide a guarantee that inaccuracy and disagreement will be removed.
  • The writer is guilty of bias and inaccuracy.
  • There are lots of ways in which inaccuracy could have crept into this final result.
  • The defence team's own expert said lip-reading had 'a high degree of inaccuracy.' The Sun
  • I will confront the major criticisms of the language, explaining the origin and inaccuracy of the many myths about Pascal.
  • Is there a desire to make those quotations, to make those historical observations accurate, or is there a desire for inaccuracy to be in play?
  • When the ratio of tube to particle dia- meter is low, the model inaccuracy and experimental error result in large scatter of the wall heat transfer coefficient data.
  • The writer is guilty of bias and inaccuracy.
  • When the ratio of tube to particle dia- meter is low, the model inaccuracy and experimental error result in large scatter of the wall heat transfer coefficient data.
  • There is a slight inaccuracy in this design.
  • From there, Memphis 'inaccuracy from the field allowed the Suns to extend the lead to double digits. USATODAY.com
  • Firstly, automated devices have been notorious for their inaccuracy, although accurate devices are now appearing on the market.
  • But I'm most galled by the inaccuracy of how the study's results are misleadingly characterized.
  • As a journalist you simply cannot tolerate inaccuracy.
  • Brown annotates every deliberate inaccuracy in the book's notes.
  • I find that the foolishness and inaccuracy of some anti-drug ads ruins the effectiveness of accurate programs to promote heathy decisions.
  • Even British journalists concede that the dark side of their emphasis on speed and exclusivity is the persistent problem of inaccuracy.
  • The inaccuracy of the missiles greatly diminishes their effectiveness.
  • They slung chapattis and dished out dhal with hilarious inaccuracy, but they were volunteers, and already the next sitting was agitating at the door.
  • If not an error on the same scale as Ballantyne's famous unhusked coconuts, the translucent Pacific water is clearly a high-order inaccuracy.
  • Myth, folklore and inaccuracy cloud this event, yet it still has the potency to cause controversy.
  • We need to remember, however, that inaccuracy by no means connotes inveracity. An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals
  • His play has been an infelicitous concoction of ingenuity and inaccuracy, the latter being generally fatal at this elite level. Times, Sunday Times
  • The statement of two quadrillion is right up there with every other lie, disinformation and irrational statement of the CONservative inaccuracy machine. Think Progress » Alito’s Mom:
  • The team will ransack every word of testimony, memo and report for any inaccuracy, inconsistency or contradiction.
  • This is partially due to the heavy load our lab must bear in its normal operation, and partly due to carbon dating's notorious inaccuracy in fossils of recent geologic record.
  • My prediction now, in full knowledge of my previous inaccuracy, is that his party - whose new leader lives in the next village to ours, and used to be one of our numerous record-breaking female local councillors - will dump him and either find a different potential prime minister, or (more likely) opt to back someone else's candidate while licking their wounds, as they did last December. Comment spam
  • Due to the youthful inaccuracy of the firing squad, few if any were killed at the first volley.
  • Instead, another layer of inaccuracy via inference: Since Hu's family has caused all this trouble by raising a fuss, peeved officialdom is going to make sure that the old girl is out of here chop-chop.
  • The plot is set in the Cold War, and apart from some inaccuracy from a technical point of view it is a good thriller. Filmstalker: Movies for the Dads
  • It's all very well and good to toss off unsupported assertions on paper, because the habit of wrapping inaccuracy in arrogance is the old medium's most venerable tradition, especially at Spencer Street.
  • There is a slight inaccuracy in this design.
  • By attributing a statement to a character in the galaxy, the authors could blame the inaccuracy on a misperception , rather than have an omniscient narrator make a continuity flub.
  • Many other instances of alleged inaccuracy, distortion and misrepresentation have remained on file and I may well have ignored them but for the sudden eruption of complaints in recent months.
  • You are right to point out that I overlooked the scientific inaccuracy of the previous questioner and focused instead on the food being microwaved.
  • Maybe this blog have alot of inaccuracy and solecism, hence, If you specialize in English, help me correct it, Thanks!
  • Roddick and Federer joked about what they call the inaccuracy of the Hawkeye line-calling system. NYT > Home Page
  • Jaworski says McNabb diminishes the impact of his inaccuracy by being an elite scrambler and rarely making stupid throws, and that was true even during his struggles.
  • Kirk was happy to claim extraordinary knowledge and nonplus Perrit and I've never seen him since back off this comment or apologize for its inaccuracy. Mark Kirk Knew Better Than Did His Constitutents; We Were Supposed to Trust Him and WWII Proved Him Out...Right?
  • Other writers may have been mistrustful of the notorious inaccuracy of the process of printing.
  • But historical inaccuracy is something I simply cannot let stand. Think Progress » Sarkozy lauds the U.S.: ‘Welcome to the club of states who don’t turn their back on the sick and the poor.’
  • -- Is it ironic or sad that an article about Wikipedia inaccuracy is inaccurate? Coffee Break: July 25
  • MALDEF posted a video on You Tube reputing what it calls inaccuracy and bias in the CBS reporting and brought me into the story as well. CNN Transcript Apr 30, 2008
  • But though there is an inaccuracy in saying that the freezing of water is due to the loss of its heat, no practical error arises from it; nor will a parallel laxity of expression vitiate our statements respecting the multiplication of effects. Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects Everyman's Library
  • The inaccuracy of the missiles greatly diminishes their effectiveness.
  • We did not use a theodolite to fix the position of the whales precisely, so the speed estimates have some inherent inaccuracy.
  • The defence team's own expert said lip-reading had 'a high degree of inaccuracy.' The Sun
  • As a journalist you simply cannot tolerate inaccuracy.

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