How to Use imprecise in a Sentence

imprecise

adjective
  • It's an imprecise translation of the original sentence.
  • For humans, the sense of smell is a crude and imprecise tool.
    Jack Gedney, The Mercury News, 11 Mar. 2024
  • The hosts made the most of the ball possession but were too imprecise with the final ball.
    SI.com, 13 Dec. 2017
  • The technique was imprecise, and so were the schedules.
    Jason Laughlin, Philly.com, 3 Nov. 2017
  • In Chatwood, the Dodgers faced one of the most imprecise pitchers in baseball.
    Andy McCullough, latimes.com, 20 June 2018
  • The claim is too broad, too vague, too imprecise to be meaningful.
    Rory Smith, New York Times, 29 Sep. 2020
  • In other words, the camera is looking with the imprecise eye of a doodle.
    James Vincent, The Verge, 6 July 2018
  • But these labels are clumsy and imprecise—and getting more so all the time.
    Joe Pinsker, The Atlantic, 14 Oct. 2021
  • The linkage is stiff and imprecise and undergoes as many jerks and seizures between throws as Mark Fidrych.
    John Phillips, Car and Driver, 8 Aug. 2023
  • For many people, dealing with a dropper or a vape pen for CBD is too imprecise.
    Michael Wright, Discover Magazine, 22 Oct. 2021
  • The show runs a half hour, well under the standard 50 minutes, and the choreography is a bit imprecise at times.
    Jared Kaufman, Twin Cities, 7 Aug. 2024
  • And yet this process seemed, to him, alarmingly imprecise.
    James Somers, The New Yorker, 13 Sep. 2019
  • Chiefs complained that pass-through traffic in many towns made the measure too imprecise to be useful.
    Tom Condon, courant.com, 31 Jan. 2022
  • The downside is that this big-picture view is fairly imprecise.
    Lois Parshley, Scientific American, 1 May 2018
  • At the time, glucose tests were imprecise and cumbersome.
    Emily Langer, Washington Post, 5 May 2021
  • Maybe someone would apologize for the confusion or the imprecise wording of the law.
    Jessica Contrera, Anchorage Daily News, 20 Feb. 2018
  • But between the flashes of brilliance with Porter are stretches of imprecise basketball, where Porter racks up both the turnovers and the early-shot-clock jumpers.
    Michael Shapiro, Chron, 14 Mar. 2023
  • The animal-pelt overlay is applied in such a way that we are made aware of the cutting and pasting involved, the imprecise use of scissors, the shadow at the edges.
    New York Times, 13 Oct. 2021
  • But those layers were imprecise and could not give a year-by-year reading of how much silver was being produced.
    Jason Daley, Smithsonian, 16 May 2018
  • But even Strauss and Howe acknowledge that cycles are imprecise and that the crisis might not come for another few decades.
    Peter Schwartz, WIRED, 1 Apr. 1997
  • The story is further complicated by our gauzy and imprecise view in the rear-view mirror.
    Washington Post, 14 May 2021
  • The feature was hardly that, a display of imprecise punching and pawing.
    USA TODAY, 14 Oct. 2017
  • Among the many complications of predicting an impact is that the study is so imprecise.
    Popular Mechanics, 11 Nov. 2015
  • Until recently, imprecise barrel bombs as well as Russian airstrikes had done little to dislodge the rebels in the east.
    Michael Jackson, Foreign Affairs, 7 Dec. 2016
  • Digital researchers and aid groups say free mapping tools like Google Earth are too imprecise.
    Luiz Romero, Wired, 28 May 2021
  • At first, all the measurements were so imprecise that nobody worried.
    Quanta Magazine, 13 Feb. 2018
  • But if Democrats get a pass to be imprecise when complaining about McConnell’s brazen scheme, what will happen to our democratic norms?
    Margaret Hartmann, Daily Intelligencer, 28 June 2018
  • His passing against Kentucky was atrocious, imprecise and lacked touch.
    Mike Bianchi, Orlando Sentinel, 11 Sep. 2022
  • Cowboy boot sightings are at an all-time high, by my own imprecise measurements.
    Halie Lesavage, Harper's BAZAAR, 22 Aug. 2023
  • But these forecasts, and the utility of even making long-term imprecise predictions, have faced strong pushback from some quarters.
    Jessie Yeung, CNN, 12 Aug. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'imprecise.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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