Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
She is scrupulous about not making factual mistakes in her fictional world.
And there are two factual mistakes that seem quite unfortunate in such an instructional text.
Regular readers tend to be the best editors of the factual mistakes in letters.
Regrettably, there are also a number of repetitions and factual mistakes.
In addition to the political controversy, many factual mistakes can be found in the movie picture.
"One factual mistake and you could get hung."
For the first time since the main switch had been thrown all those years ago, the computer had made a factual mistake.
Factual mistakes usually result from a failure to ask the right question and not from erroneous information.
Though full of numerous factual mistakes and fabricated details, this article immediately became a sensation in the Western media.
Caray has been criticized for making factual mistakes during postseason broadcasts.
If there are factual mistakes, as Mrs Ford suggested, then I would like to see those put right in an amendment.
Quite critical were reviews looking at the methods (for example accused factual mistakes and complains about missing sources).
The documentary, however, made numerous factual mistakes.
Commenting on the affair, Heymann said that "For me it's beyond belief how any journalist in five pages can make so many factual mistakes.
Mr. Moynahan, no specialist on his subject, makes many small factual mistakes, and Russian names and terms are frequently garbled.
But these breaches are frequently mere secondary symptoms of a fundamental problem: first making a factual mistake and then finding oneself propelled towards a wrong conclusion.
In other words, the well-produced book does not have more information per page than the tabloid but has less "noise," such as factual mistakes, typographical errors and so on.
"Factual mistakes or overreaching by the press occur in our time-pressured environment all the time," wrote Mr. Panetta, my fellow Old Nixon Hand.
The Alabama courts had imposed heavy libel damages on The Times for running an advertisement on behalf of the civil rights movement that contained minor factual mistakes.
She was also critical of "two dozen spelling errors" and "minor factual mistakes" that made it into the text, but ultimately considered the presentation of the book to be "pleasing".
But the minor factual mistake resulted in greater scrutiny of Mr. Reagan's words and led to a period when his campaign was hampered by a series of minor gaffes.
I knew I couldn't afford to make any factual mistakes, but I also didn't want the human stories of anxiety and suffering to get lost in the arcana of public policy.
So Freud is not saying religion is a delusion or an error, he's saying it's an illusion, and it's an illusion because it's a factual mistake maintained by wish fulfilment.
It has been criticized for factual mistakes, poor research, literary ignorance, incorrect conclusions, a bias toward Western culture to the exclusion of other cultures, a tendency to overlook the negative and lack of attribution.
Fact-checking, known as "research" at many publications, is most critical for those publishing material written by authors who are not trained reporters - such writers being more likely to make professional, ethical, or mere factual mistakes.