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  1. Mar 30, 2013 · Observant paying close attention especially to details; quick to notice; showing quick and keen perception; alert and paying close attention. Perceptive having the ability to understand and notice things that many people do not notice; having or showing keenness of perception, insight, understanding, or intuition.

  2. It is defined as: not paying enough attention to what one does: a careless typist; not exact, accurate, or thorough: careless work. For example, if I write an essay, and there are terrible grammar mistakes and sentence structure mistakes all over the paper, it would be because I was careless .

  3. Jul 20, 2014 · a : denoting an individual member or subclass in logic. b : affirming or denying a predicate to a part of the subject —used of a proposition in logic <“some men are wise” is a particular affirmative>. a : concerned over or attentive to details : meticulous. b : nice in taste : fastidious. c : hard to please : exacting.

  4. May 2, 2019 · this person cannot “shut it off” and stop being attentive to detail no matter how tired / if on vacation / wanting to “tune out”—s/he can’t help but notice minor details, even when s/he isn’t even trying to pay attention; Potential candidates (but let me know if these carry any negative connotation): fastidious; meticulous

  5. Apr 6, 2015 · 1. The opposite of detail oriented is 'visionary', that is, if you want to focus on the positive connotations of someone that looks at the big picture. If you are looking to focus on the negatives, then you might want to go with careless or thoughtless. If you wanted a word that points out the negatives of someone with great attention to detail ...

  6. Sep 21, 2015 · Usually it is a caution to pay attention to avoid failure. An older, and slightly more common, phrase God is in the detail means that attention paid to small things has big rewards, or that details are important. The devil version of the idiom is a variation on the God phrase, though the exact origin of both is uncertain. (The Grammarist)

  7. Sadly becoming antiquated, but the verb attend is both adequate and more graceful than the compound pay attention. E.g., in your example I prefer, "Attend closely to this while you code." Other alternatives that omit pay: "Code only with close attention to this." "Code attentive to this."

  8. I think attention to detail might work. It's simple and well-understood – common, but not overused. You might also want to emphasize how important it was to keep the records accurate, and how much data was involved. That would help set attention to detail into context, rather than leaving it alone and nebulous.

  9. Dec 23, 2014 · "The research has been carried out with scrupulous attention to detail." NB: Colin Fine, a fine and fastidious user himself, suggested the former in a comment. Props. Granted, these two words are not used exclusively to refer to care and attention to language, but (as the example for fastidious shows) they can certainly be used in this context.

  10. Dec 19, 2012 · Ruminate: The direction is correct, but it is about "thinking about something in too much detail" vs actually describing it so. Describe ad nauseam: 3 words, and awkward sounding. Example sentence: "He began to _____ the topic" To clarify, I'm looking for a verb.