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Example sentences for "more accurate"

  • It brings with it less of irrelevant detail and is more stable than the object image, and therefore results in more accurate thinking.

  • A more accurate knowledge of the connection of physical phenomena will also tend to remove the prevalent error that all branches of natural science are not equally important in relation to general cultivation and industrial progress.

  • The Dey was obstinate, or, as he habitually lived in terror of the piratical portion of his subjects, it would perhaps be more accurate to say that he did not dare to make such an arrangement as Blake demanded.

  • Another Algiers would have been a more accurate expression.

  • A more accurate knowledge of these deposits from the Indian Ocean, and of {clviii}those which we may with probability expect from the tropical eastern Atlantic, will be sure to increase very widely our knowledge of the class.

  • A more accurate description of it, with a good explanation of its characteristic growth, was given in 1879 by Richard Hertwig in his Organismus der Radiolarien (pp.

  • The result was a more accurate map of China than existed, at that time, of any country in Europe.

  • Owing to these alternative possibilities, it would appear to be more accurate to say that systems of quantities can be found in a space, rather than that space is a quantity.

  • Buffon's conception of the operation of the geological agents did not become broader or more accurate in the interval between the appearance of his two treatises.

  • He was a graduate of Harvard, and few men anywhere had a broader or more accurate education.

  • Congress heeded the violent protest of South Carolina--perhaps it would be more accurate to say that Congress obeyed Andrew Jackson.

  • No abler or more accurate statement of the conditions and tendencies of the period exists.

  • Is always a more accurate measure of value than any other commodity, 79.

  • Corn, accordingly, it has already been observed, is, in all the different stages of wealth and improvement, a more accurate measure of value than any other commodity or set of commodities.

  • A more accurate account is given of the birds of Japan.

  • A more accurate mode of performing the experiment consists in using the plumb-line apparatus carefully adjusted, as in Fig.

  • Repeat the observation on the next clear night, and allowing for the number of whole revolutions made by the stars between the two dates, again determine from the time interval a more accurate value of the rate at which the stars move.

  • Or, to be more accurate, the same scene was enacted, for it was a scene.

  • So it was merely a quotation, or, to be more accurate, a common expression.

  • It is better, simpler, and, for most observers, more accurate to use the stethoscope and hear the change of sound.

  • Possibly one can obtain a more accurate estimate of the blood pressure in this way.

  • Palpation= Hoover has called attention to the direct palpation of the femoral artery just below Poupart's ligament as a more accurate index of the pressure in the aorta than the palpation of the radial artery.

  • Thus there was needed here a wider range of sight, a more accurate comprehension, a more correct distinction of things in the external world, in all their circumstances and relations.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more accurate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    complete circle; high angle; more accurately; more comfortable; more complete; more complicated; more gently; more grace; more instances; more just; more numerous; more open; more powerful; more practical; more precisely; more rapid; more rarely; more seen; more shall; more spiritual; more striking; more then; more trouble; more water; taking food; wings black