The question thus asked is too simple, and we must make it more precise.
This determination, however, is insufficient, and we can make it more precise.
You introduce tests of various sorts, by which to get a more precise measure of the individual's performance.
In short, the learning process often takes its start with the higher units, and reaches the smaller elements only for the purpose of more precise control.
As to any argument derived from a supposed system of influence, it is a sufficient answer to say that it ought not to be presumed; but the supposition is susceptible of a more precise answer.
In addition to this general reflection, there are considerations of a more precise nature, which forbid all apprehension on the subject.
More precise details of the manner in which a Newgate ordinary interpreted his trust will be found in the evidence of the Rev.
Possibly, however, the term suggested in the text may suffice to designate them by, at least till the establishment of some theory as to their use shall supply a more precise name.
A few facts, however, have been noted from time to time, some of which, in the absence of more precise observations, may help to throw light on the physical characteristics of the primitive British races.
But now, when we are, for the moment, directly concerned with the specific question of the evolution of sexual morality, it is necessary to be more precise in formulating the terms we use.
In 1879 a new stage of more preciseknowledge of the venereal diseases began with Neisser's discovery of the gonococcus which is the specific cause of gonorrhoea.
Both on the scientific side and on the social side, however, we are beginning to attain a clearer realization of the end to be attained and a more precise knowledge of the methods of attaining it.
This is just what we shall have to show now in a more precise way, by the same example we have chosen, the formation of the eye in molluscs and vertebrates.
To be more precise, let us consider an existential, instead of an attributive, judgment.
Let us merely recall that the progress of the nervous system has been effected both in the direction of a more precise adaptation of movements and in that of a greater latitude left to the living being to choose between them.
Austin's analysis of this vague subdivision led him to a more precise determination of the relationship of sanctions to law, viz.
Our entire activity becomes faster, more precise, more segmented, more distributed, more complex.
The broader issue is actually reading and writing, or to be more precise, the means through which an author can address many readers.
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what the teachings here presented have in common in their relation to the State than has here been given.
There cannot be given a more precise definition of what is common to the indoministic teachings on the one hand and to the doministic on the other, and what is peculiar to the one group as against the other, than has here been given.
Our study can come to a more precise specification of its problem.
We may even give a more precise formula to this law, by excluding the Platyrrhines or American apes as distant relatives, and restricting the comparison to the narrower family-circle of the Catarrhines, the apes of the Old World.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more precise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.