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Example sentences for "inaccurate"

Lexicographically close words:
inacceptable; inaccessibility; inaccessible; inaccuracies; inaccuracy; inaccurately; inaction; inactive; inactivity; inadequacies
  1. Nothing can be more inaccurate than to apply the terms, past, present, future, to real Being, which is immovable.

  2. Nor can any thing be more inaccurate than to apply the term real being to past, or present, or future, or even to non-existence.

  3. That is a very fair comparison, with the exception that the hard, bare and fast putting-green of a dry summer would present infinitely greater inaccuracies to the already sufficiently inaccurate golf ball than would the billiard table.

  4. Of sculpture on a larger scale we possess nothing except the gravestones found at Mycenae and the relief which has given a name, albeit an inaccurate one, to the Lion Gate.

  5. We note the inaccurate anatomy of breast, abdomen, and back, in dealing with which the sculptor had little experience to guide him.

  6. Perhaps it is inaccurate in this case to speak of an anta-capital at all, seeing that the anta simply shares the moldings which crown the wall.

  7. Mr. Janssen is more inaccurate than any of his predecessors, some of whom have occasionally misled him.

  8. After the printed title is a portrait, as may be supposed, of Holbein, within a border containing six ovals of various subjects, and a short preface or account of that artist, but accompanied with some very inaccurate statements.

  9. Before this most inaccurate title are two engraved leaves, on one of which is Deuchar's portrait, in a medallion, supported by Adam and Eve holding the forbidden fruit.

  10. All human beings are spiteful and inaccurate and all those things you said; but that isn't all they are.

  11. Oh, emotional and inaccurate and untrustworthy and spiteful.

  12. Equally unfair and inaccurate is the editorial reference to the report of the Royal Commission of 1906.

  13. The reader may ask why correction of so inaccurate a statement concerning the English law was not sent to the journal in question.

  14. I have so very little time for thinking out, and working at any one subject continuously, that my whole habit of mind becomes, I fear, inaccurate and desultory.

  15. Jowett actually avows a return to the old exploded theory of the inaccurate use of language in the Greek Testament.

  16. In the second place, it is full of inaccurate statements of fact, all in a direction tending to favour the hypothesis.

  17. Inspiration may have employed current though inaccurate statements as to matters of history, because they were the best available means of impressing upon men's minds truth of a more important sort.

  18. But neither were the lands of Great Britain, in the 4th of William and Mary, assessed according to any rent roll, but according to a very loose and inaccurate estimation.

  19. But Sir Joshua is as inaccurate in fact, as false in principle.

  20. For the most part, automatic writing provides only vapid or inaccurate stuff which is its own refutation.

  21. Davey then wrote correct accounts of what he had done, and it was seen that the accounts of the sitters were inaccurate and their observation faulty.

  22. This is negative evidence, but it is far more impressive than any of the rhetorical and inaccurate accounts of experiences which they give us.

  23. In the debate with me he made statement after statement of the most inaccurate description.

  24. You thus get quite inaccurate accounts from Spiritualists, though they are often quite innocent.

  25. I have already said that Sir Arthur is here even more inaccurate than he usually is.

  26. John Campbell a very inaccurate man in his narrative, Sir?

  27. It is, however, possible that I may have been inaccurate in my perception of what Dr.

  28. It is a dry and inaccurate compilation from various sources, unduly partial to the Goths (ed.

  29. Inaccurate statements in response to tactile tests were made, apparently on account of lack of understanding.

  30. I have the impression that they are inaccurate in a great many instances,--sometimes in positive statement, but very much more inaccurate by the suppression of statements that really belong to the history.

  31. The Jews, I am told, won't stand any nonsense when they have their sacred writings copied, always destroying every inaccurate MS.

  32. However, Dave and Dolly went to bed this evening without even that inaccurate enlightenment.

  33. It should be as simple and concise as possible; it is the place for facts, not for opinions, and if inaccurate it is worse than none.

  34. It is inaccurate to say that the lands are become 'the property of Government' by reason of their being assessed.

  35. It is inaccurate to describe the limitation imposed on the manufacture of salt as a monopoly.

  36. The moral is, I fancy, that while inaccurate conclusions are extremely difficult, we can only hope to approach them by a firm grasp of the first principles revealed in the simplest cases.

  37. The personal paragraphist of 1749 was perhaps no less inaccurate than his descendant of to-day.

  38. According to Arthur Murphy, Fielding's earliest and too often inaccurate biographer, the boy received "the first rudiments of his education at home, under the care of the Revd.

  39. There could be no question that by some means or other the story had got abroad--no doubt in a most inaccurate and unjust form--and was doing harm.

  40. It is useless to go through all the particulars, besides sleep, in which people have a peculiar talent for gleaning inaccurate information.

  41. That man would never waste his time with collecting inaccurate information from nurse or patient.


  42. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inaccurate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    adulterated; aleatory; amorphous; apocryphal; approximate; bad; black; blemished; blurred; broad; careless; chance; chancy; chaotic; confused; damaged; defective; deficient; disordered; erroneous; evil; fallible; false; faulty; foggy; fuzzy; general; hazy; ill; immature; impaired; imperfect; improper; impure; inaccurate; inadequate; inauspicious; inchoate; incoherent; incomplete; incorrect; indecisive; indefinable; indefinite; indeterminate; indistinct; inexact; inexpedient; inferior; invalid; lacking; lax; loose; makeshift; malevolent; mediocre; misleading; mistaken; mixed; negligent; obscure; off; partial; patchy; peccant; random; rude; shadowy; shapeless; short; sinful; sinister; sketchy; slipshod; specious; sweeping; unclear; unconscientious; uncritical; undefined; undetermined; undeveloped; uneven; unexacting; unfinished; unrealistic; unreliable; unscrupulous; unskillful; unsound; unspecified; untoward; untrue; untruthful; vague; veiled; vicious; wanting; wicked; wrong