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is some error
adverb
Of a measurement: approximately, roughly
Exact(9)
"There is some error, there is some play," Mr. Armstrong said.
It's done by humans, so of course there is some error.
"Of course, in all political action there is some error," he said, but added, "the main error, the only one that would have been unforgivable, would have been to do nothing against the mass unemployment in our country".
Using data from one weather station only approximates the weather across the study area, and as weather is known to vary enormously at the localised level (see Brunsdon et al. 2009) it is certainly the case that there is some error in our measurements of weather.
We therefore compare all other models with the basic model (noting that there is some error in likelihood estimates – see Fig. 3 – and therefore in the AIC values).
A possibility equal to one must be interpreted as a complete consistency, while lower values imply that there is some error in measurements or in the model.
Similar(50)
"I thought there was some error in the apparatus".
"Either way there was some error made there".
I know they haven't thought too hard about it, because they got the production cost estimates just this morning, so I suspect there may be some error.
If one of these properties is not fulfilled, then there will be some error in the implementation of the model.
There may be some error here, but, even adding an unlikely 10percentt error rate, it appears that most users who are savvy enough to download a smart dialer app like Truecaller don't use taxi on-demand services.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com