[ UK /pˈɪnpɔ‍ɪnt/ ]
[ US /ˈpɪnˌpɔɪnt/ ]
VERB
  1. locate exactly
    can you pinpoint the position of the enemy?
    The chemists could not nail the identity of the chromosome
NOUN
  1. the sharp point of a pin
  2. a very brief moment
    they were strangers sharing a pinpoint of time together
  3. a very small spot
    the plane was just a speck in the sky
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How To Use pinpoint In A Sentence

  • A blonde girl, hmmm, with big boobs, that's not so easy to pinpoint, there have been a quite a few of them on the show.
  • They need to pinpoint exactly what skills are necessary.
  • The moons will look like pinpoints of light lined up on either side of the planet.
  • It was like tiny little pinpoints of touch, slamming into my entire body.
  • The only light in the room came from a lamp over the turntables, the glow of the broadcast board, and the green and red pinpoints of LED light from the satellite equipment and reel-to-reels.
  • Pinpointing the source of crosslinguistic influences in the interlanguage of a multilingual speaker is less straightforward.
  • Additionally, the Bombardier Beetle has the ability to direct its defensive spray toward its aggressor with pinpoint accuracy.
  • Lessons of IVF babies mix-up ‘will be learned’ Report pinpoints series of failures at Yorkshire fertility clinic where white couple had mixed-race twins in error
  • Beside us, a Forward Air Controller uses a powerful periscope to pinpoint enemy targets over the sandbagged rim of the observation post.
  • The date for the appearance of "kvell" in the English language is tricky to pinpoint exactly. Latest Articles
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