Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
There was something too about the inexactitude of it all that the Mind found almost frightening.
With numbers so large, the inexactitude of rough estimation is needed.
This, however, may be sheer coincidence or the inexactitude of my human perception.
A small inexactitude can bring us out at a velocity that will lead to serious consequences."
Only occasionally did dramatic enthusiasm spill over into musical inexactitude.
But there are countless cases where inexactitude is confusing.
It is not true - what old Winston would call a terminological inexactitude, in his comic way.
This inexactitude stems from Stewart's reticence about revealing details of her early life.
There was that sudden moment of morphological inexactitude.
The earth itself was guilty of inexactitude.
The letter is a masterpiece of inexactitude.
"Yes," he hissed, "you suspect me of a terminological inexactitude.
According to Thomas Trollope, "his inexactitude as an historian is notorious."
Data conversion can also suffer from inexactitude, the result of converting between formats that are conceptually different.
That was a - an inexactitude.
He withdrew it - and substituted "terminological inexactitude."
But with their long, lightly touched, disconnected lines, they have the glamorous inexactitude of fashion illustrations - slightly gawky ones.
One example of this inexactitude concerns a $5 wager between Butler and me that serves as the title of a chapter.
But he recovered and then said, with civilian inexactitude, 'So you believe that short space of time would be fine to make such a judgement?'
If one did not know of such inexactitude of specification, one might find the origin of the fluctuations mysterious.
"Its exactitude is obvious, but its inexactitude is hidden; its wildness lies in wait."
Terminological inexactitude (lie)
There is a maddening inexactitude to Ms. Secrest's writing that consistently undermines her characterizations.
In 1966, a member reprimanded for declaring that an opponent's speech was "deliberate fabrication" was allowed to substitute "gross terminological inexactitude."
A Miramax spokesman said, "Harvey may have been guilty of what Churchill called a 'terminological inexactitude.' "