Thesaurus / inaccurate
FEEDBACKHow to use inaccurate in a sentence
I have it on right now and it suggests the tone of this post is “concerned,” which isn’t totally inaccurate.
AMAZON’S NEW FITNESS TRACKER LISTENS TO YOUR VOICE TO FIGURE OUT YOUR MOODSTAN HORACZEKSEPTEMBER 2, 2020POPULAR-SCIENCEEitan Hersh, a professor at Tufts who testified to Congress after the Cambridge Analytica scandal in 2016, believes the data—particularly the modeled attributes—is inaccurate to the point of hindering its usefulness for campaigns.
EXPLAINER: WHAT DO POLITICAL DATABASES KNOW ABOUT YOU?TATE RYAN-MOSLEYAUGUST 31, 2020MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEWHowever, because protecting the Ethics process is an imperative for the Party I can say that it would be inaccurate to say that the complaint is closed or that no action was taken.
BARRIOS MAKES DUBIOUS CLAIMS ON INVESTIGATIONS INTO HIS SPENDINGJESSE MARXAUGUST 25, 2020VOICE OF SAN DIEGOBoth the hardware and software need to be improved over time to reduce inaccurate predictions, and Steindorfer argues that the whole system needs to be thought of as a continued work in progress.
HOW TO CAST A WIDER NET FOR TRACKING SPACE JUNKNEEL PATELAUGUST 5, 2020MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEWYou can imagine why it’s important to identify the difference between accurate and inaccurate statistical discrimination.
DOES HOLLYWOOD STILL HAVE A PRINCESS PROBLEM? (EP. 394)STEPHEN J. DUBNEROCTOBER 24, 2019FREAKONOMICSHis works were popular for a time, until they were discovered to be very inaccurate, and carelessly compiled.
THE EVERY DAY BOOK OF HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGYJOEL MUNSELLMr. Haywood is evidently inaccurate in writing evristic, which is wrong in Greek as well as in German and English.
NOTES AND QUERIES, NUMBER 178, MARCH 26, 1853VARIOUSThe history of the late session was known to the Spaniards principally by inaccurate reports brought by Irish friars.
THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND FROM THE ACCESSION OF JAMES II.THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAYZoe never had a brother, so the relationship, at all events, is inaccurate.
THE SAGAS OF OLAF TRYGGVASON AND OF HARALD THE TYRANT (HARALD HAARDRAADE)SNORRI STURLUSONWilliams had shown himself to be an inaccurate conveyancer in the drafting of the original deed.
A SHORT HISTORY OF RHODE ISLANDGEORGE WASHINGTON GREENEWORDS RELATED TO INACCURATE
- apparent
- apparently right
- beguiling
- captious
- casuistic
- colorable
- credible
- deceptive
- delusive
- empty
- erroneous
- fallacious
- false
- flattering
- hollow
- idle
- illogical
- inaccurate
- incorrect
- likely
- nugatory
- ostensible
- ostentatious
- plausible
- presumable
- presumptive
- pretentious
- probable
- seeming
- sophistic
- sophistical
- sophisticated
- spurious
- unsound
- untrue
- vain
- wrong
- counterfactual
- deceitful
- deceptive
- delusive
- deviant
- disloyal
- dissembling
- distorted
- erroneous
- faithless
- fallacious
- false
- fictitious
- forsworn
- hollow
- imprecise
- inaccurate
- inconstant
- incorrect
- inexact
- lying
- meretricious
- misleading
- mistaken
- off
- out of line
- perfidious
- perjured
- prevaricating
- recreant
- sham
- specious
- spurious
- traitorous
- treacherous
- two-faced
- unfaithful
- unloyal
- unsound
- untrue
- untrustworthy
- untruthful
- wide
- wrong
- abnormal
- at odds
- awkward
- bad form
- discordant
- discrepant
- erroneous
- false
- ill-advised
- ill-timed
- imprudent
- inaccurate
- inadmissible
- inadvisable
- inapplicable
- inapposite
- inappropriate
- inapt
- incongruous
- incorrect
- inept
- inexpedient
- infelicitous
- inharmonious
- inopportune
- irregular
- ludicrous
- malapropos
- odd
- off base
- out of place
- out-of-season
- preposterous
- unbecoming
- unbefitting
- uncalled-for
- uncomely
- undue
- unfit
- unfitting
- unseasonable
- unseemly
- unsuitable
- unsuited
- untimely
- unwarranted
- wrong
- abnormal
- at odds
- awkward
- bad form
- discordant
- discrepant
- erroneous
- false
- ill-advised
- ill-timed
- immodest
- imprudent
- inaccurate
- inadmissible
- inadvisable
- inapplicable
- inapposite
- inappropriate
- inapt
- incongruous
- incorrect
- indecent
- indecorous
- indelicate
- inept
- inexpedient
- infelicitous
- inharmonious
- inopportune
- irregular
- ludicrous
- malapropos
- naughty
- odd
- off base
- out of line
- out of place
- out-of-season
- preposterous
- unapt
- unbecoming
- uncalled-for
- uncomely
- undue
- unfit
- unfitting
- unseasonable
- unseemly
- unsuitable
- unsuited
- untimely
- untoward
- unwarranted
- wrong
- capricious
- deceitful
- deceptive
- delusive
- disreputable
- dubious
- erroneous
- fake
- fallible
- false
- fickle
- fly-by-night
- furtive
- hallucinatory
- hollow
- implausible
- inaccurate
- inconstant
- irresponsible
- makeshift
- meretricious
- mistaken
- pretended
- pseudo
- questionable
- sham
- shifty
- specious
- treacherous
- tricky
- uncertain
- unconvincing
- undependable
- underhand
- underhanded
- unfaithful
- unsound
- unstable
- unsure
- untrue
- untrustworthy
- vacillating
- wavering
- weak
Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.