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to corrections
noun
The act of correcting.
Exact(58)
Inconsistencies leading to corrections (left column) are listed according to the model component that was corrected: GPR, NETWORK, and BIOMASS.
Recessions tend to prompt changes to corrections policies.
Temperatures reached 109 degrees that day, contributing to Mr. Smith's death, according to corrections officials.
Last year alone checks just like these led to corrections to awards of more than £700m.
He added that the company had made that opinion clear to corrections departments nationwide.
He then moved to corrections and retired in 1994 after the longest term as prison chief in the state's history.
Vermont, Connecticut, Delaware, Michigan and Oregon devote as much money or more to corrections as they do to higher education.
The language changes, from "penitence" to "incarceration" to "corrections," but very little is fundamentally different than it was.
Mr. Kissel said he was sending a letter to corrections officials demanding to know what books were available to inmates.
The victim thought that her attacker was still in prison, but he had been released on Oct. 30, according to corrections officials.
Stun guns and electronic anklets may add a high-tech sheen to corrections work, but its underlying pursuit is an age-old struggle, Thomas McCarthy says.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com