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correct make right or correct; "Correct the mistakes"; "rectify the calculation" right: make reparations or amends for; "right a wrongs done to the victims of the Holocaust" chastise: censure severely; "She chastised him for his insensitive remarks" compensate: adjust for; "engineers will work to correct the effects or air resistance" free from error; especially conforming to fact or truth; "the correct answer"; "the correct version"; "the right answer"; "took the right road"; "the right decision" discipline: punish in order to gain control or enforce obedience; "The teacher disciplined the pupils rather frequently" decline: go down in value; "the stock market corrected"; "prices slumped" socially right or correct; "it isn't right to leave the party without saying goodbye"; "correct behavior" in accord with accepted standards of usage or procedure; "what's the right word for this?"; "the right way to open oysters" adjust: alter or regulate so as to achieve accuracy or conform to a standard; "Adjust the clock, please"; "correct the alignment of the front wheels" treat a defect; "The new contact lenses will correct for his myopia" right: correct in opinion or judgment; "time proved him right"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
correction the act of offering an improvement to replace a mistake; setting right a quantity that is added or subtracted in order to increase the accuracy of a scientific measure something substituted for an error a rebuke for making a mistake a drop in stock market activity or stock prices following a period of increases; "market runups are invariably followed by a correction" discipline: the act of punishing; "the offenders deserved the harsh discipline they received" treatment of a specific defect; "the correction of his vision with eye glasses"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
corrective designed to promote discipline; "the teacher's action was corrective rather than instructional"; "disciplinal measures"; "the mother was stern and disciplinary" tending or intended to correct or counteract or restore to a normal condition; "corrective measures"; "corrective lenses" a device for treating injury or disease
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
correlation a reciprocal relation between two or more things correlation coefficient: a statistic representing how closely two variables co-vary; it can vary from -1 (perfect negative correlation) through 0 (no correlation) to +1 (perfect positive correlation); "what is the correlation between those two variables?" a statistical relation between two or more variables such that systematic changes in the value of one variable are accompanied by systematic changes in the other
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
correspondence communication by the exchange of letters agreement: compatibility of observations; "there was no agreement between theory and measurement"; "the results of two tests were in correspondence" commensurateness: the relation of corresponding in degree or size or amount mapping: a function such that for every element of one set there is a unique element of another set symmetry: (mathematics) an attribute of a shape or relation; exact reflection of form on opposite sides of a dividing line or plane parallelism: similarity by virtue of corresponding
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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