To put it more accurately, the prediction of the appearing of the Son of Man in Matt.
Or, to put it more accurately, while all the Gospels are biographies, they are legendary biographies, even though they come down from the first century.
All that is blessedly and eternally true; but it is also true that there is a higher relation than that to which the name 'children of God' is more accurately given, and to which in the New Testament that name is confined.
More accurately we may render 'through faith' and might even venture to suppose that the thought of faith as an open door through which Christ passes into the heart, floated half distinctly before the Apostle's mind.
Avenge the Christian blood which flows beneath the sword of the Turks, and which on all sides rises up towards thee.
Genoa interested the Pisans in her cause, and sought allies and auxiliaries even among the Greeks, at that time impatient to repossess Constantinople.
Orations of Cicero, addressed the sovereign pontiff with the same congratulations and the same eulogies.
Furthermore, if it were necessary to regrind the tool, it would be reset nearer to the lathe centres, where the work would be more rigidly held; hence the tool could be more accurately set to the diameter of the finishing cut.
In any event, however, work liable to spring or too long to be finished at one cut without removing the tool to grind it, can be more accurately finished by grinding in a lathe, such as was shown in Figs.
The mortises in the wheel rim are made taper in both the breadth and the width, which enables the tooth shank to be more accurately fitted, and also of being driven more tightly home, than if parallel.
Thus the intelligible character coincides with the Idea, or, more accurately, with the original act of will which reveals itself in it.
It is intended in them that art and God should work together, or, more accurately, the precept is that the aesthetic side of humanity is one of the noblest manifestations of the infinite within us.
If there are rumors and whisperings in advance, she invariably takes the bull, or, more accurately speaking, the heifer, by the horns and puts the inquiry.
The general law of association, or, more accurately, the common condition under which all exciting causes act, and in which they may be generalized, according to Aristotle is this.
More accurately, it need not be designed expressly to preach virtue and the fear of God, and to be destined for the edification of devotees.
More accurately, 'of the possibility of the connectedness'.
Or, more accurately, I should say that she has demonstrated that there was nothing the matter with them save a superabundance of error in their souls.
I perceive that it makes considerable difference in this world whose ox is gored, or, to put it more accurately, whether one is carrying off some other man's daughter or is being robbed of his own.
Hence the famous dictum that each has as much law on his side as his power extends (or more accurately, as his power is believed to extend).
All "bad" acts are inspired by the impulse to self preservation or, more accurately, by the desire for pleasure and for the avoidance of pain in the individual.
From this state of things arises the danger that, through the perception of truth or, more accurately, seeing through delusion, one may bleed to death.
It is the duty of intellectual men who are thus isolated to set the example of that which their neighbors call eccentricity, but which may be more accurately described as superiority.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more accurately" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.