error
error — noun
1. Something that is done wrong or produced incorrectly, such as a wrong number in
Something that is done wrong or produced incorrectly, such as a wrong number in a calculation, a word that is misspelled, or a mistake in a process.
Tanvi found an error in her bank statement and called the customer service line.
error in + [document/statement]
The software update caused an error that deleted several user accounts.
There was a spelling error on the wedding invitation that nobody noticed until the envelopes arrived.
Ayana made an error when she typed the numbers into the calculator.
The error rate on the factory line dropped after the new training program.
- correction
the act of making something right after it was wrong
文法句型
error + in + [document / calculation / system]
make + error
contain + error
用法筆記
More formal than mistake. Common in computing, accounting, and formal writing. Use make an error or commit an error rather than do an error.
常見錯誤
2. A belief, opinion, or decision that is wrong because it is based on incorrect in
A belief, opinion, or decision that is wrong because it is based on incorrect information or faulty thinking — for example, choosing the wrong candidate for a job because you misread their qualifications.
Jisoo assumed the report was due Monday and missed the Friday deadline — an embarrassing error.
error to + infinitive
Noa later admitted that her judgment about the candidate was based on a fundamental error.
error in judgment / reasoning
The company's decision to ignore the early warning signs turned out to be a costly error.
By the time Ari realized the error in his reasoning, the damage had already been done.
- misconception
a belief that is not based on facts; less common in everyday speech
- fallacy
a false idea that many people believe; used in academic or argumentative contexts
文法句型
error in + [judgment / reasoning / approach]
error + to-infinitive
error of + [judgment]
用法筆記
Frequently used in fixed patterns: an error of judgment, an error in reasoning. Subject is often a person's decision, assumption, or belief. Distinguish from sense 1 (MISTAKE): sense 2 focuses on wrong beliefs or judgments, not on factual mistakes in documents or processes.