Accurate in a sentence as an adjective

I knew a VC who you could describe as Barney Fife, and be 100% accurate.

" The idea isn't to get an accurate answer.

Where people go and what people do is far more accurate than what people will tell you about themselves.

The C virtual machine does not provide an accurate model of why your code is fast on a modern machine.

Therefore the service should have to prove the results are accurate before advertising it as a first step in prevention.

Sure, it's a sweeping generalization, but a surprisingly accurate one.

There are certainly people trying to argue to the public that a drone strike is highly precise, clinically correct, and technologically accurate.

But assuming the report is accurate, this is unacceptable behavior and I'd like to see more employees who take a risk on startups getting what they deserve and enforcing their rights.

The only reasonably accurate paragraph is this: "And, more importantly, the lower energy range from 114 to just under 145 billion electron volts, a region of energy that Fermilab has determined, through earlier experiments, may harbor the Higgs, has not been ruled out.

I think David Foster Wallace gives the most accurate comparison I've read, and I always want to show it to those lucky souls who have never had to deal with this type of depression:The so-called psychotically depressed person who tries to **** herself doesnt do so out of quote hopelessness or any abstract conviction that lifes assets and debits do not square.

Accurate definitions

adjective

conforming exactly or almost exactly to fact or to a standard or performing with total accuracy; "an accurate reproduction"; "the accounting was accurate"; "accurate measurements"; "an accurate scale"

adjective

(of ideas, images, representations, expressions) characterized by perfect conformity to fact or truth ; strictly correct; "a precise image"; "a precise measurement"

See also: exact precise