Skip to main content

errorless

/er-er/US // ˈɛr ər //UK // (ˈɛrə) //

无错,没有错误,无错误,无误

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a deviation from accuracy or correctness; a mistake, as in action or speech: His speech contained several factual errors.
    • : belief in something untrue; the holding of mistaken opinions.
    • : the condition of believing what is not true: in error about the date.
    • : a moral offense; wrongdoing; sin.
    • : Baseball. a misplay that enables a base runner to reach base safely or advance a base, or a batter to have a turn at bat prolonged, as the dropping of a ball batted in the air, the fumbling of a batted or thrown ball, or the throwing of a wild ball, but not including a passed ball or wild pitch.
    • : Mathematics. the difference between the observed or approximately determined value and the true value of a quantity.
    • : Law. a mistake in a matter of fact or law in a case tried in a court of record.writ of error.
    • : Philately. a stamp distinguished by an error or errors in design, engraving, selection of inks, or setting up of the printing apparatus.Compare freak, variety.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Exactly how much you’ll need is often a bit of trial and error.

  • This means they are hard to ace, but also, they make very few errors on their return strokes.

  • In fact, Drake appears poised to be a seeding error of a different sort.

  • With the upgrade, the new Coverage reporting greatly expanded the amount of information for site owners, including errors, indexing levels, and urls that were being excluded from indexing.

  • In 2016, with support from her parents and after a lot of trial and error with designers, Samaira introduced CoderBunnyz, her first board game.

  • Everyone out there who says, “Charlie Hebdo provoked,” is making the same fundamental error.

  • There were also crashes not due to either mechanical or human error but to a lack of warning of dangerous conditions.

  • But as everyone knows, he went on to say—not once but many times—that that was the greatest error of his career by far.

  • The misidentification has since been corrected, and The Daily Beast regrets the error.

  • But millions of rules result in perpetual error, and, as a terminal side effect, make leadership and accomplishment illegal.

  • It is a very common error to consider these deposits as evidence of excessive excretion.

  • My mother now tells me that she knew of this mistake, an error of the New York paper in copying the item from a Southern journal.

  • It was a fatal error, for though the Spanish people might despise their King, they were intensely proud of their nationality.

  • It was an error not to separate borrowing entirely from monetary issues.

  • Consequently he was able to turn in a clear essay upon the subject, which, upon examination, the king found to be free from error.