no... but it means almost correct.
right correct accurate
In mathematics, accurate means that you get the correct answer, or, if using imprecise processes, that you get close to the real answer.
both are same
They are the same thing. They give you an accurate representation of all the values in a data set
no... but it means almost correct.
right correct accurate
In mathematics, accurate means that you get the correct answer, or, if using imprecise processes, that you get close to the real answer.
It's only an accurate statement if Conard and his sister will sing a duet. If "accurate statement" is supposed to mean grammatically correct, then yes, "Conard and his sister will sing a duet in the concert" is correct.
both are same
Both are correct forms. They do not mean the same thing.
Accurate data is information that is correct.
Yes. That spelling of accurate is accurate (correct in detail).
Because "accurate" begins with a vowel, you need the article "an", as in "an accurate deduction".
they both mean the same thing.
To ensure that you can get accurate results,and thus making a correct statement.
accurate, adequate, all right, approved, convenient, correct, fair, fine, good, in order, middling, not bad, ok, passable, permitted, so-so, surely, tolerable you can find these on dictionary.com!