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Showing results for erratum.
Definitions

erratum

[ih-rah-tuhm, ih-rey-, ih-rat-uhm] / ɪˈrɑ təm, ɪˈreɪ-, ɪˈræt əm /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

I think his social media followers will instead shout, “Holy erratum, Batman.”

From Washington Post • Nov. 1, 2019

But in an erratum issued by the journal, first reported by Retraction Watch, the authors said those two findings were “exactly reversed.”

From Washington Times • Jun. 11, 2016

This one isn’t, strictly speaking, a study but, rather, a remarkable erratum to a study that garnered quite a bit of attention when it was published, in 2012, in the American Journal of Political Science.

From The New Yorker • Jun. 11, 2016

“That’s another error in this publication and I’ve submitted an erratum to the publisher,” Thorp said.

From MSNBC • Jun. 10, 2014

And it is but just to him to say that the erratum, if the whole truth were told, was probably more venial than his forgiving spirit allowed him to fully disclose.

From Benjamin Franklin; Self-Revealed, Volume I (of 2) A Biographical and Critical Study Based Mainly on his own Writings by Bruce, Wiliam Cabell