in ‧ ac ‧ cu ‧ ra ‧ cy AC /ɪnˈækjərəsi, ɪnˈækjʊrəsi/ BrE AmE noun ( plural inaccuracies )
[ Word Family: noun : ↑ accuracy ≠ ↑ inaccuracy ; adverb : ↑ accurately ≠ ↑ inaccurately ; adjective : ↑ accurate ≠ ↑ inaccurate ]
1 . [countable] a statement that is not completely correct:
Jansen’s review contained several inaccuracies.
2 . [uncountable] a lack of correctness:
As a journalist, you simply cannot tolerate inaccuracy.
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THESAURUS
▪ mistake something incorrect that you accidentally do, say, or write:
a spelling mistake
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I made a mistake – it should say £230, not £320.
▪ error formal a mistake:
an error in the report
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grammatical errors
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He had made a serious error on his tax form.
▪ misprint a small mistake in something that is printed:
There was a misprint in the article, and instead of ‘pleasant’ it said ‘pheasant’.
▪ typo informal a mistake in something that has been typed or printed:
I spotted a couple of typos in the letter.
▪ inaccuracy formal a piece of information that is not completely correct:
The report contained several inaccuracies.
▪ mix-up a careless mistake in which one name, time, address etc has been confused with another, so that the details of something are wrong:
There was a mix-up over the train times and I missed my train.
▪ slip-up a careless mistake when you are doing something:
The other team took advantage of the goalie’s slip-up.
▪ oversight a mistake in which you forget something or do not notice something:
Through some oversight, the brochures were not ready by the right date.
▪ a slip of the tongue a mistake in which you accidentally say a similar sounding word:
When I said Thursday, I meant Tuesday. It was a slip of the tongue.
▪ faux pas /ˌfəʊ ˈpɑː, ˈfəʊ pɑː $ ˌfoʊ ˈpɑː/ formal an embarrassing mistake in a social situation, when you do or say something that you shouldn’t:
Harris, trying to be funny, addressed the waiter as ‘boy’. A deathly silence followed this faux pas.