Examples of using Less precise in English and their translations into Portuguese
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Official/political
Less precise dimensional control and a much lower rate of production are the two main disadvantages.
On the other hand, he said, the results achieved in Rome in regard to political unity were less precise.
more complicated, less precise, more descriptive.
XIV, records in fewer and less precise destination, given the vastness of the American continent
The methods to assess anaerobic energy release during exercise are less precise than those previously discussed.
lines to try to put a limit more or less precise, but we are certainly not so tax.
Search radar is usually less precise and only distinguishes between targets that are hundreds of yards
Those texts that obsessively aim at arousing a precise response on the part of more or less precise empirical readers[…] are in fact open to any possible'aberrant' decoding.
This makes the importance of each of the methods less precise on clinical practice.
while perhaps less precise than some other methods, is the easiest method.
The term was coined in 1976 by economist Fred Hirsch to replace the more colloquial, but less precise"neener-neener.".
What I'm doing here-- it's no less precise than profiling a suspect.
the simplified model can be more or less precise.
border, less precise for this exercise.
standard regulatory quality report, a fact which may make the evaluation of all the quality aspects less precise.
crowd counting is more difficult and less precise.
resulting in less precise measures.
your painting will become less precise.
It is also recognised that an earlier provision of advice will in some cases result in a less precise forecast, but this may be an acceptable consequence.
For example, the CELL-CENTER type is the simplest to be obtained- but also less precise.