desribes an adjective
precise is precise and concise is concise
It is precise if it is repeatable.
"Precise" IS a word!
44.49 is more precise than 44.5 but less precise than 44.491 - The larger a number becomes the more precise it is.
no only if it is precise it is accurate
desribes an adjective
Slurped
Gambling is a verb, a gerund, to be precise which is a verb ending in "ING".
In the sentence that you give, John was faster but Billy was the fastest, there are comparative adjectives, faster and fastest. The verb in this sentence is was. It is not a comparative verb, just a verb. An existential verb, to be precise.
Yes, had is a verb. It's the past tense of have, to be precise.
embrace, as in "She embraced the concept of dimensional analysis"
The word always is an adverb. To be more precise it is an adverb of frequency which modifies the verb as every time, often, sometimes, never.
Yes, "located" is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "locate," which means to determine or discover the precise place or position of something.
No, "defines" is not a common noun. It is a verb that describes the action of giving a precise meaning to something.
The word may be one of these:accurate - (adjective) precise, correctaccentuate - (verb) to improve or highlight appearance
No, locate is a verb (locate, locates, located, locating). Example:I can't locate my keys.
The likely word is the adjective "precise" (accurate, exact). The similar word is the verb or noun "process" meaning procedure or method.