errors and omissions - meaning and definition. What is errors and omissions
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What (who) is errors and omissions - definition

Errors and expectations

errors and omissions         
LIABILITY INSURANCE
Professional indemnity insurance; Malpractice insurance; Professional Indemnity Insurance; Errors and omissions insurance; E&O insurance; E & O insurance; Errors and omissions; Professional insurance
n. short hand for malpractice insurance which gives physicians, attorneys, architects, accountants and other professionals coverage for claims by patients and clients for alleged professional errors and omissions which amount to negligence.
Professional liability insurance         
LIABILITY INSURANCE
Professional indemnity insurance; Malpractice insurance; Professional Indemnity Insurance; Errors and omissions insurance; E&O insurance; E & O insurance; Errors and omissions; Professional insurance
Professional liability insurance (PLI), also called professional indemnity insurance (PII) but more commonly known as errors & omissions (E&O) in the US, is a form of liability insurance which helps protect professional advice- and service-providing individuals and companies from bearing the full cost of defending against a negligence claim made by a client, and damages awarded in such a civil lawsuit.
The Comedy of Errors         
  • frontispiece]] dated 1890
  • Carmel Shakespeare Festival]] production, [[Forest Theater]], Carmel, California, 2008
  • The first page of the play, printed in the [[First Folio]] of 1623
EARLY PLAY BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Comedy of Errors; Comedy of errors; The Comedy Of Errors; A Comedy of Errors; Comedy Of Errors; Antipholus; The Comedie of Errors; The Comedie of Errors.; Aegeon; Dromio; Angelo (The Comedy of Errors); Comedy of Errors (play); The comedy of errors; The Comedy of Errors (play)
The Comedy of Errors is one of William Shakespeare's early plays. It is his shortest and one of his most farcical comedies, with a major part of the humour coming from slapstick and mistaken identity, in addition to puns and word play.

Wikipedia

Errors and Expectations

Errors and Expectations: A Guide for the Teacher of Basic Writing, published in 1977 by Oxford University Press, by Mina P. Shaughnessy, was the first book-length investigation of writing problems experienced by under-prepared college freshmen. At the time of the book’s publication, Shaughnessy was the director of the Instructional Resource Center and an associate dean of CUNY, having previously worked both as a basic writing (BW) instructor and the director of basic writing at City College in New York.

The book grew out of Shaughnessy’s nine years’ experience teaching basic writing to open admissions students. Overwhelmed by the error-ridden compositions produced by her students, she systematically analyzed 4,000 placement essays written by incoming freshmen at City College in order to better understand the logic of student errors in composition. This research—funded in part by the Carnegie Foundation grant—coupled with her own experience provides the foundation of the book which seeks both to inform basic writing instructors and provide them with a means for approaching their students’ areas of weakness. Perhaps the central and most important observation Shaughnessy makes is that there is a pattern to student error.

Shaughnessy’s research centered around the theory that basic writing students write with deficiencies not because they are incapable or disadvantaged, but because they are unskilled beginners who like all beginners of any discipline must learn by mistakes and with much practice.

Examples of use of errors and omissions
1. An estimated 464,000 applications are returned by the bureau because of errors and omissions.
2. "Your errors and omissions were formidable," the GMC panel told Williams as it banned him from undertaking court work for three years.
3. BRIAN SHELDRAKE WESTON–SUPER–MARE, SOMERSET Back–to–back theories Sir÷ Guy Keleny speculates about the origins of the expression "back to back" for events occurring without a break (Errors and Omissions, 25 June). Might the analogy be with books, hardback or paperback, stored on a bookshelf or stacked on a table, usually with no space between them?
4. Barbara Van Gelder, Crawford‘s lawyer, said he "is going to plead guilty to two misdemeanors tomorrow afternoon, and he is going to admit his financial disclosures had errors and omissions, mostly with his wife‘s continued ownership of stocks," the Associated Press reported.
5. He does not yet know the results of the board inspections but says: "If they come out and say we can do good audits we will have external verification for the first time." Some investors – the real "clients" of auditors – are also looking forward to seeing the reports, which in the US have included detailed descriptions of firms‘ errors and omissions.