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exact adjective [ ɪɡˈzakt ]

• not approximated in any way; precise.
• "the exact details were still being worked out"

exact verb

• demand and obtain (something) from someone.
• "he exacted promises that another Watergate would never be allowed to happen"
Similar: demand, require, insist on, command, call for, impose, request, ask for, expect, look for, extract, compel, force, wring, wrest, squeeze, obtain, constrain,
Origin: late Middle English (as a verb): from Latin exact- ‘completed, ascertained, enforced’, from the verb exigere, from ex- ‘thoroughly’ + agere ‘perform’. The adjective dates from the mid 16th century and reflects the Latin exactus ‘precise’.


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