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Synonyms

accurately

American  
[ak-yer-it-lee] / ˈæk yər ɪt li /

adverb

  1. in a way that is free from error or defect and consistent with a standard, rule, or model.

    She worked on aircraft before they left on missions; the work needed to be done fast and accurately to ensure safety on all flights.

  2. correctly; precisely.

    He’s a good lacrosse player; he passes well and can shoot accurately.

    Humans are generally afraid of death—or, more accurately, don't want to die.


Other Word Forms

  • hyperaccurately adverb
  • superaccurately adverb
  • unaccurately adverb

Etymology

Origin of accurately

accurate ( def. ) + -ly

Explanation

Anything done accurately is done correctly or with very few mistakes. Many things should be performed accurately, especially brain surgery. When you're accurate, you're precise: you get things right. To do something accurately is to do it in a precise, correct, careful manner. A baseball player with a good batting average hits the ball accurately. An accountant who never makes mistakes juggles the numbers accurately. If you got 100 on a test, you performed accurately. The opposite of this word is inaccurately, which means you did something wrong, incorrectly, or with a lot of mistakes.

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Vocabulary lists containing accurately

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Participants, all university students, completed short daily tests that measured how quickly and accurately they could think.

From Science Daily • Apr. 15, 2026

To predict them accurately, the system has to internalize what coherent thinking looks like.

From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 13, 2026

Without ingredient disclosures, parents are unable to accurately compare products and may not know when manufacturers change ingredients, Knight said.

From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 10, 2026

But Christendom most accurately captures the spirit of the idea: organizing the world along medieval civilizational lines.

From Slate • Apr. 9, 2026

Now would come a lecture, or more accurately, an oration, because Scythe Goddard loved nothing more than performing to the gallery, even if it was just a gallery of one.

From "Scythe" by Neal Shusterman