ETYM AS. balca beam, ridge; akin to Icel. bâlkr partition, bjâlki beam, OS. balko, German balken; cf. Gael. balc ridge of earth between two furrows. Related to Balcony, Balk, Bulk.
(Baseball) An illegal pitching motion while runners are on base.
Likely to stop abruptly and unexpectedly.
chiefly British variant of BALK.
(Casual) An embarrassing moment, usually recorded on film or on tape.
1. A fly ball hit barely beyond a baseball infield; a high baseball pitch lobbed to the batter
2. An embarrassing public blunder
An embarrassing mistake; SYN. blooper, bungle, foul-up, flub, botch, boner, boo-boo, misdoing.
ETYM Old Eng. bugge, from W. bwg, bwgan, hobgoblin, scarecrow, bugbear. Related to Bogey, Boggle.
1. A fault or defect in a system or machine; SYN. glitch.
2. A small hidden microphone; for listening secretly.
One that bums.
A sudden flurry of activity (often for no obvious reason); SYN. fit.
British; Mess
ETYM Old Eng. defaute, Old Fren. defaute, defalte, fem., French défaut, masc., Late Lat. defalta, from a verb meaning, to be deficient, to want, fail, from Latin de- + fallere to deceive. Related to Fault.
1. Act of failing to meet a financial obligation; SYN. nonpayment, nonremittal.
2. Loss due to not showing up.
The value(s) or option(s) that are assumed during operation when not specified.
ETYM Latin defectus, from deficere, defectum, to desert, fail, be wanting; de- + facere to make, do. Related to Fact, Feat, Deficit.
1. A failing or deficiency; SYN. shortcoming.
2. An imperfection in a bodily system.
3. An imperfection in a device or machine; SYN. fault, flaw.
ETYM Latin delinquentia, from delinquens.
1. A tendency to be negligent and uncaring; SYN. dereliction, willful neglect.
2. An antisocial misdeed in violation of the law by a minor; SYN. juvenile delinquency.
3. Nonpayment of a debt when due.
ETYM Old Fren. error, errur, French erreur, Latin error, from errare to err. Related to Err.
1. Any action that is incorrect, usually by inadvertence or carelessness.
2. Part of a statement that is not correct; SYN. mistake.
3. Departure from what is ethically acceptable; SYN. wrongdoing.
4. A misconception resulting from incorrect information; SYN. erroneous belief.
5. (Baseball) A failure of a defensive player to make an out when normal play would have sufficed; SYN. misplay.
In computing, a fault or mistake, either in the software or on the part of the user, that causes a program to stop running (crash) or produce unexpected results. Program errors, or bugs, are largely eliminated in the course of the programmer’s initial testing procedure, but some will remain in most programs. All computer operating systems are designed to produce an error message (on the display screen, or in an error file or printout) whenever an error is detected, reporting that an error has taken place and, wherever possible, diagnosing its cause.
ETYM From Fail.
1. An act that fails.
2. An event that does not accomplish its intended purpose.
3. An unexpected omission.
4. Lack of success.
ETYM Old Eng. fallace, fallas, deception, French fallace, from Latin fallacia, from fallax deceitful, deceptive, from fallere to deceive. Related to Fail.
In philosophy, a type of mistake in reasoning or inference (deduction or conclusion drawn from what has been implied). In Aristotelian logic (syllogism) and in modern formal logic, there are rules for detecting and preventing fallacies, and ensuring that an inference is valid.
Fallacies in everyday reasoning can be less easy to detect. Begging the question is a fallacy that occurs when one of the premises of an argument could not be known to be true unless the conclusion were first assumed to be true. Other fallacies include fallacies of ambiguity; of arguing against a person, rather than against what the person says; and of arguing that something is true simply because there is no evidence against it.In literary criticism, either of two approaches held to be errors by certain critics. The New Criticism movement in the US held that a literary text could be criticized legitimately only in terms of its internal structures. Two followers of this tradition, W K Wimsatt and Monroe C Beardsley, argued 1954 that it was mistaken to interpret literature in terms of its emotional effects (affective fallacy) or in terms of the intentions of the author (intentional fallacy).
A misconception resulting from incorrect reasoning; SYN. false belief.
ETYM Old Eng. faut, faute, French faute (cf. Italian, Spanish, and Portu. falta), from a verb meaning to want, fail, freq., from Latin fallere to deceive. Related to Fail, Default.
1. Responsibility for a bad situation or event.
2. A serve that lands outside the prescribed area.
3. (Geology) A fracture in the earth's crust with displacement of one side with respect to the other; SYN. geological fault, fault line, fracture, break.
(French) “false step”; social solecism; embarrassing action.A socially awkward or tactless act; SYN. gaffe, solecism, slip, gaucherie.
A social blunder.
A small problem.
A spike caused by the skew of switches or logic. Glitches are a troublesome source of error in high-speed D/A convertors and they are most prevalent at the mid scale switching location.
1. The fact or action of being inadvertent
2. A result of inattention; oversight
ETYM Latin lapsus, from labi, p. p. lapsus, to slide, to fall: cf. French laps. Related to Sleep.
A break or intermission in the occurrence of something.
Spontaneous expulsion of a fetus from the womb before it is capable of independent survival. Often, miscarriages are due to an abnormality in the developing fetus.
Failure of a plan; SYN. abortion.
1. A wrong action attributable to bad judgment or ignorance or inattention; SYN. error, fault.
2. An understanding of something that is not correct; SYN. misunderstanding, misapprehension.
ETYM Latin omissio: cf. French omission. Related to Omit.
1. Something that has been omitted.
2. Passing over something out of neglect.
3. A mistake resulting from neglect; SYN. skip.
4. Any process whereby sounds are left out of spoken words or phrases; SYN. deletion.
Problem, ponekad prolazan, koji dovodi do čudnog načina rada programa, ili potpunog otkazivanja rada.
1. A problem, usually minor.
2. A brief surge in electrical power.