Pinpoint in a sentence as a noun

Time how long the round-trip takes and you can pinpoint where the break is and send out a repair crew.

It is rare to be able to pinpoint a experience as a life-altering event in one's life.

I've been running businesses all my life and it's kinda hard to pinpoint where this one started, but I started selling my current product in 2005.

I have a theory about bubbles: It's relatively easy to spot that you're in one, but it's very hard to pinpoint what sort of bubble it is.

When Schiller unveiled the iPhone 5, it rose from the stage floor on a smoothly-rising and rotating pedestal, pinpoint spotlights hitting the phone and only the phone.

Then you can start creating intelligent ***** that pinpoint those important processes, to avoid the unfortunate side effects of ***** like ketamine.

The more comprehensive the local database is, the quicker/easier it is for Location Based Services to help pinpoint a users location.

Pinpoint in a sentence as a verb

I've heard several times iPhone users complain that Android equivalents of their iOS apps felt sluggish; though they couldn't pinpoint it exactly.

It's hard to pinpoint exactly, but there was a time when it became clear that Microsoft's actions as a whole were increasingly getting less and less coordinated.

The description goes on to say that the application uses GPS satellites to pinpoint the location of any phone number, "It works, guaranteed!

I'm guessing it wouldn't take much for them to correlate those visitors to IP addresses, cookies, device IDs and cell tower signals to pinpoint people in real time too?Knock knockWho is it?It's the police.

I agree with the majority of the article, but one thing leapt out - the first question that the author suggests might 'help you to pinpoint your resentment';Why do you want to take a break, go on holiday?

The gist of this article is that Obama was able to use a combination of data mining and creative marketing to pinpoint impressionable voters in crucial areas with a view toward manipulating the electoral college system to his advantage.

Where I have worked for the last 5 to 7 years, I am pretty much the last line "of defense", so to speak... because every time something stopped working and I could not figure it out, it would go on taking the support team of one of the biggest names in IT literally a year trying to pinpoint the issue only to not being able to come up with a solution in the end. This is not meant to boast, I am working towards a point:So I would say my "career" is there... yet my personal life and emotional happiness is in complete ruins; while my age and point in career match at "30", emotionally and as a person, a human being, I feel like I am 12.

Pinpoint definitions

noun

a very brief moment; "they were strangers sharing a pinpoint of time together"

noun

a very small spot; "the plane was just a speck in the sky"

See also: speck

noun

the sharp point of a pin

verb

locate exactly; "can you pinpoint the position of the enemy?"; "The chemists could not nail the identity of the chromosome"

See also: nail