Becoming; airtight - usage in the presented contexts












1














I am pleased to join the community.



I would like to confirm whether it is correct to say:



1) "He employed becoming means to alleviate harmful effects of (...)"



2) "He managed to pinpoint the problem with airtight accuracy."



3) "He undertook surgical steps to address the issue (...)" (surgical serving as a synonym for accurate)



Thank you.










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    1














    I am pleased to join the community.



    I would like to confirm whether it is correct to say:



    1) "He employed becoming means to alleviate harmful effects of (...)"



    2) "He managed to pinpoint the problem with airtight accuracy."



    3) "He undertook surgical steps to address the issue (...)" (surgical serving as a synonym for accurate)



    Thank you.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1







      I am pleased to join the community.



      I would like to confirm whether it is correct to say:



      1) "He employed becoming means to alleviate harmful effects of (...)"



      2) "He managed to pinpoint the problem with airtight accuracy."



      3) "He undertook surgical steps to address the issue (...)" (surgical serving as a synonym for accurate)



      Thank you.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      I am pleased to join the community.



      I would like to confirm whether it is correct to say:



      1) "He employed becoming means to alleviate harmful effects of (...)"



      2) "He managed to pinpoint the problem with airtight accuracy."



      3) "He undertook surgical steps to address the issue (...)" (surgical serving as a synonym for accurate)



      Thank you.







      meaning-in-context






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 12 hours ago





















      New contributor




      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      asked 12 hours ago









      Albinosek

      62




      62




      New contributor




      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      Albinosek is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1














          Unfortunately, none of these seem correct, either idiomatically or directly, as written.



          Option 1 is incomprehensible.



          Option 2 makes little sense (pinpoint accuracy is in fact a common phrase, laser-like precision, surgical precision are also) as "airtight accuracy" is not a common phrase or concept - I would simplify with: "He managed to pinpoint the problem", as pinpoint already implies a high degree of precision.



          Option 3 I could see re-writing as: "He undertook corrective steps with surgical precision" to clearly indicate that the steps chose to correct the issue were only those required directly to correct the issue with no waste, no unnecessary actions or collateral impacts.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago












          • "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
            – GerardFalla
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            All clear, thank you very much.
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          Unfortunately, none of these seem correct, either idiomatically or directly, as written.



          Option 1 is incomprehensible.



          Option 2 makes little sense (pinpoint accuracy is in fact a common phrase, laser-like precision, surgical precision are also) as "airtight accuracy" is not a common phrase or concept - I would simplify with: "He managed to pinpoint the problem", as pinpoint already implies a high degree of precision.



          Option 3 I could see re-writing as: "He undertook corrective steps with surgical precision" to clearly indicate that the steps chose to correct the issue were only those required directly to correct the issue with no waste, no unnecessary actions or collateral impacts.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago












          • "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
            – GerardFalla
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            All clear, thank you very much.
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago
















          1














          Unfortunately, none of these seem correct, either idiomatically or directly, as written.



          Option 1 is incomprehensible.



          Option 2 makes little sense (pinpoint accuracy is in fact a common phrase, laser-like precision, surgical precision are also) as "airtight accuracy" is not a common phrase or concept - I would simplify with: "He managed to pinpoint the problem", as pinpoint already implies a high degree of precision.



          Option 3 I could see re-writing as: "He undertook corrective steps with surgical precision" to clearly indicate that the steps chose to correct the issue were only those required directly to correct the issue with no waste, no unnecessary actions or collateral impacts.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago












          • "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
            – GerardFalla
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            All clear, thank you very much.
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago














          1












          1








          1






          Unfortunately, none of these seem correct, either idiomatically or directly, as written.



          Option 1 is incomprehensible.



          Option 2 makes little sense (pinpoint accuracy is in fact a common phrase, laser-like precision, surgical precision are also) as "airtight accuracy" is not a common phrase or concept - I would simplify with: "He managed to pinpoint the problem", as pinpoint already implies a high degree of precision.



          Option 3 I could see re-writing as: "He undertook corrective steps with surgical precision" to clearly indicate that the steps chose to correct the issue were only those required directly to correct the issue with no waste, no unnecessary actions or collateral impacts.






          share|improve this answer












          Unfortunately, none of these seem correct, either idiomatically or directly, as written.



          Option 1 is incomprehensible.



          Option 2 makes little sense (pinpoint accuracy is in fact a common phrase, laser-like precision, surgical precision are also) as "airtight accuracy" is not a common phrase or concept - I would simplify with: "He managed to pinpoint the problem", as pinpoint already implies a high degree of precision.



          Option 3 I could see re-writing as: "He undertook corrective steps with surgical precision" to clearly indicate that the steps chose to correct the issue were only those required directly to correct the issue with no waste, no unnecessary actions or collateral impacts.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 12 hours ago









          GerardFalla

          6247




          6247












          • Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago












          • "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
            – GerardFalla
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            All clear, thank you very much.
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago


















          • Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago












          • "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
            – GerardFalla
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            All clear, thank you very much.
            – Albinosek
            11 hours ago
















          Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
          – Albinosek
          11 hours ago






          Thank you. I didn't think the second and third to be correct, either. Why is the first one incomprehensible to you, though? Here's more obvious re-statement: "he used appropriate ways to reduce harmful effects of."
          – Albinosek
          11 hours ago














          "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
          – GerardFalla
          11 hours ago




          "appropriate means to alleviate" would work, or "appropriate means to remediate harmful effects" could also work depending upon context... "appropriate ways" is a conflict in register "appropriate" is a higher-register conceptual word, whereas "ways" is a lower-register more generic conceptual word - I'd try to identify a tonal register and stick with it. I'm guessing (as you've not provided contextualising information) that this needs to hit a professional tone and register. "Surgically precise steps" would work, BTW.
          – GerardFalla
          11 hours ago




          1




          1




          All clear, thank you very much.
          – Albinosek
          11 hours ago




          All clear, thank you very much.
          – Albinosek
          11 hours ago










          Albinosek is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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