View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Inexact.

Inexact

Inexact meaning

Imperfectly conforming; exceeding or falling short in some respect. | Imprecisely or indefinitely conceived or stated. | having a path-dependent integral

Example sentences (20)

There are roughly 16,000 Americans in Sudan, many of which are dual citizens, though the Biden administration has warned that this number is inexact because the State Department does not track Americans living abroad.

But the council rejected them, saying the decree confirming his loss of French nationality was "not retroactive" and his sworn declaration was "inexact" at the time of its filing.

While some say the inexact science of chasing perfect waves around the world is the lifeblood of surfing culture, it can't mask the disappointment of discovering the surf is underwhelming when arriving at a break.

Probably no other volume in the New Testament has suffered as much from inexact and even hysterical attempts at analysis.

The aspirin was administered in boluses, or in pill form, as opposed to previous studies where the drug was pumped into the rumen or injected, or mixed in drinking water, which may lead to inexact dosing.

The parallels with Charlottesville are inexact because the organizers of Monday’s rally are mainly gun advocates.

We understand that weather forecasting is an inexact science, and that the likelihood that the forecasters will get it wrong is the nature of the forecasting beast.

As Dorian has shown over the past 10 days, predicting the path of a hurricane is an inexact science.

Calculating crowd sizes is an inexact science, but there were undeniably thousands of people marching in London on Tuesday.

The analysis you’re about to read is based on inexact estimates, and even it won’t come to a single-number conclusion.

Estimates of the number of wounded are inexact.

For instance, we have already noted that the operation + on a calculator (or a computer) is inexact.

IEEE 754 specifies five arithmetic exceptions that are to be recorded in the status flags ("sticky bits"): * inexact, set if the rounded (and returned) value is different from the mathematically exact result of the operation.

Information theory Information theory recognises that all data are inexact and statistical in nature.

Moreover, these relations were inexact, applying only to ideal chemical systems.

Philo's usage is Essaioi, although he admits this Greek form of the original name that according to his etymology signifies "holiness" to be inexact.

Should a large letter have to be rewritten, owing to the inexact copy of the abbreviator, the abbreviator and not the receiver of the Bull must pay the extra charge for the extra labour to the apostolic writer.

The irregular and inexact rhymes and varied lengths of the lines play some part.

These names have been abandoned in favor of numeric data because many of the correlations were found to be either inexact or incorrect and more than four major glacials have been recognized since the historical terminology was established.

The timeframes associated with each generation are inexact and are only indicative of the period during which their design philosophies and technology employment enjoyed a prevailing influence on fighter design and development.