What's the difference between addendum and erratum?

Addendum


Definition:

  • (n.) A thing to be added; an appendix or addition.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Possible applications of the results to a cardiomyocyte are discussed in Addendum.
  • (2) The data presented here form the experimental basis for the test controlling the composition of gentamicin sulphate in the British Pharmacopoeia 1973: Addendum 1975, and for the introduction into the British Pharmacopoeia of nmr spectrometry as an analytical technique.
  • (3) In February 2015, the Kremlin backed an addendum to the Minsk Agreement to end Ukraine’s war at the exact moment it was also supporting a separatist offensive to capture the strategic town of Debaltseve.
  • (4) Use of a combination of monooxygenase inhibitors and chloroquine therefore appears to be a promising addendum to the chemotherapy of malaria caused by chloroquine-resistant parasites.
  • (5) And Damian has also sent me an addendum in reaction to my earlier post highlighting the two-page document Defra is citing as its evidence for the cull: You are right to highlight to the two-page April 2011 document as the entire basis of the government's argument that science backs its cull.
  • (6) The assay methods used in this study were those described in the United States Pharmacopeia XXI Ed and British Pharmacopoeia 1980, Addendum 1983.
  • (7) The document abrogates the Scaf’s 18 June constitutional addendum - widely interpreted as an 11th hour power-grab on the eve of the presidential election - granting the president full executive and legislative powers, and reasserting his control over the constitution-drafting process.
  • (8) (2) A minor addendum to last week's fact-fest : the last time Dundee and Dundee United both played at home on the same day was as recently as Boxing Day 2012, just weeks ago.
  • (9) An addendum was later made to the main trial to compare the self-teaching booklet to the traditional lecture format in teaching endodontic diagnosis.
  • (10) And they can only survive, he evidently believed, by massive terror – though that addendum was kept secret, and is still not known to loyalists who perceive the ideological enemy as having "gone on the attack" – the near-universal perception, as Kern observes.
  • (11) In the Addendum, an additional group of 17 patients is mentioned with the same result.
  • (12) The data indicate that chlorambucil induced renal hypoplasia results in reductions in renal function that persist for at least the first 3 weeks after birth in the rat and that physiological assessment of developmental toxicity can provide an extremely useful addendum to the more classical morphological criteria.
  • (13) An addendum notes that so far 81 patients have been treated with the drug combination, and the results are characterized as very satisfactory, with no complications related to treatment.
  • (14) Mood was assessed with the Hamilton Depression Scale and an addendum that evaluated fatigue, sociability, appetite, and carbohydrate craving.
  • (15) Nappies An addendum to the report indicates that CIA officers were authorised to force detainees to wear nappies for up to three days on end.
  • (16) The findings of cruel and inhuman treatment are published as an addendum to the special rapporteur's report to the UN general assembly on the promotion and protection of human rights.
  • (17) As an addendum, losing some people in the process makes it all the more delightful for the rest of us.
  • (18) An addendum includes a review of New York State's experience with abortion in its first year of its liberalized abortion law, showing handling of a mass abortion program with increasing safety and efficiency.
  • (19) Quality control data including assay, content uniformity, disintegration and dissolution indicated that both products passed the pharmacopoeial requirements, USP XXI and BP 1980, Addendum 1983.
  • (20) An addendum shows 22 more admission for septic abortion; 18 were treated by the described regimen, and 1 case developed septic shock.

Erratum


Definition:

  • (n.) An error or mistake in writing or printing.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The main chain and side chains are composed of ----3Glc1----,----3Gal1----,----6Man1----,----4Gal1, [corrected] and the branching points consist of (formula; see erratum) These results indicated that LR-polysaccharide IIa has a highly complicated structure.

Words possibly related to "erratum"