Erratum in a sentence as a noun

An erratum has been published"Anyone knows where it is?

A minor erratum: the article refers to the FGC-9 weapon as the FCG-9.

They most likely thought what they said was correct, and will follow up on that and send an erratum/clarification.

An erratum is a correction included with an already published work.

Seriously, remove the mistakes already, don't put an erratum 357 pages later.

The identification of ivy bridge seems oddly specific if they're not referring to the erratum.

It fixes a critical erratum, classified by Intel as a security issue, that affects any server running 32-bit VMs in PAE mode.

This seems like the usual processor erratum causing potentially very bad things, but only in very rare conditions that no one really understands.

I actually reported an erratum and John responded within 10 minutes for clarification and subsequently updated the article.

If you deem it unworthy and someone claiming a re-discovery, then it would be wise of you to write a letter to the editors to point out the error, or even better publish an erratum.> I'm sorry, I couldn't quite untangle this sentence.

Erratum definitions

noun

a mistake in printed matter resulting from mechanical failures of some kind

See also: misprint typo literal