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To exact something is to not only demand it, but also obtain it. The most common things exacted—revenge, retribution, and that ilk—often require physical force, but other things exacted—such as penalties and prices, promises and concessions—can be obtained with gentler forms of persuasion. The variation is present in the word’s Latin ancestor too: exigere means “to drive out; to demand; and to measure.” Do not confuse the verb exact with the more common verb extract. Extract is primarily about removing something, and need not involve a demand: a dentist extracts a tooth from (we hope) a willing patient, and extracting juice from an orange carries no connotation of insistence. Note, though, that there are cases in which either verb can be used: confessions, for example, are sometimes said to be exacted or extracted, with both typically implying significant effort by the one obtaining the confession.
Synonyms
Verb
demand, claim, require, exact mean to ask or call for something as due or as necessary.
demand implies peremptoriness and insistence and often the right to make requests that are to be regarded as commands.
claim implies a demand for the delivery or concession of something due as one's own or one's right.
require suggests the imperativeness that arises from inner necessity, compulsion of law or regulation, or the exigencies of the situation.
exact implies not only demanding but getting what one demands.
Adjective
correct, accurate, exact, precise, nice, right mean conforming to fact, standard, or truth.
correct usually implies freedom from fault or error.
accurate implies fidelity to fact or truth attained by exercise of care.
exact stresses a very strict agreement with fact, standard, or truth.
nice stresses great precision and delicacy of adjustment or discrimination.
right is close to correct but has a stronger positive emphasis on conformity to fact or truth rather than mere absence of error or fault.
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Word History
Verb
Middle English exacten "to require as payment," borrowed from Latin exāctus, past participle of exigere "to drive out, achieve, enforce payment of or the performance of (a task), require, inquire into, examine" from ex- ex- entry 1 + agere "to drive (cattle), be in motion, do, perform" — more at agent
Adjective
borrowed from Latin exāctus, from past participle of exigere "to drive out, achieve, require, inquire into, examine, measure" — more at exact entry 1
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Cite this Entry
“Exact.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/exact. Accessed 23 Jan. 2025.
Kids Definition
exact
1 of 2 verbexact
2 of 2 adjectiveMore from Merriam-Webster on exact
Nglish: Translation of exact for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of exact for Arabic Speakers
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