in ‧ ac ‧ cu ‧ rate AC /ɪnˈækjərət, ɪnˈækjʊrət/ BrE AmE adjective
[ Word Family: noun : ↑ accuracy ≠ ↑ inaccuracy ; adverb : ↑ accurately ≠ ↑ inaccurately ; adjective : ↑ accurate ≠ ↑ inaccurate ]
not completely correct OPP accurate :
A lot of what has been written about him is inaccurate.
inaccurate information/data etc
He was fined $300,000 for making inaccurate statements to Congress.
—inaccurately adverb
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THESAURUS
▪ wrong not correct or right – used about facts, answers etc, or people:
For every wrong answer, you lose five points.
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The figure he gave me was wrong.
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I think you’re wrong about that.
▪ incorrect something that is incorrect is wrong because someone has made a mistake. Incorrect is more formal than wrong :
I’m afraid these prices are incorrect.
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The doctor had made an incorrect diagnosis.
▪ inaccurate something that is inaccurate is not exactly right and contains mistakes:
inaccurate information
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inaccurate measurements
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The old maps were often inaccurate.
▪ false not based on true facts:
Are the following statements true or false?
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He was accused of giving false information to the police.
▪ untrue [not usually before noun] not based on true facts, especially because someone is lying or guessing:
I can’t believe he said that about me. It’s completely untrue!
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The allegations were untrue.
▪ misleading a misleading statement or piece of information makes people believe something that is wrong, especially because it does not give all the facts:
The article was very misleading.
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misleading statistics
▪ misguided a misguided decision, belief, action etc is wrong because it is based on bad judgement or understanding:
That decision seems misguided now.
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It was the consequence of a misguided economic policy.
▪ mistaken wrong – used about ideas and beliefs. Also used about a person being wrong. You’re mistaken sounds more polite and less direct than saying you’re wrong :
She’s completely mistaken if she thinks that I don’t care about her.
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a mistaken belief