to be precise• He was born in April - on the 4th to be precise.• He supplied me with money - fourpence a week to be precise.• In produce, to be precise.• Or the paddock, to be precise.• In the conceptual case, each example's properties are supposedto be precise and discrete.• I say four, but to be precise, channels two and three are in fact combined.• A dromedary, to be precise, the one-humped variety, also known as ships of the desert.
Originprecise
(1500-1600)Frenchprécis, from Latinpraecisus, from praecidere“to cut off”