How To Use Corrective In A Sentence

  • We need to take corrective action to halt this country's decline.
  • He would murmur a quiet corrective now and then, or insert an informative note, but never parade his learning.
  • Coronet Foods has been aggressively investigating and taking corrective action.
  • Maybe our series provides a corrective to some reality TV. Times, Sunday Times
  • The biography is a useful corrective to the myths that have grown up around this man.
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  • For example, a short-sighted person might meet one test for disability, whilst with corrective lenses few would regard his myopia as a disability.
  • His emphasis on material austerity directly challenges our modern addiction to comfort, one of the Celtic tradition's most important correctives to our present mindset.
  • Minor corrective surgery can help and some understanding reassurance could help your wife too. The Sun
  • He has received extensive corrective surgery to his skull.
  • If you have used salt throughout the winter to de-ice sidewalks, take this corrective step to protect landscape plants.
  • The refresher course was more a corrective system to erring professional drivers.
  • On Sunday the Alice News - assuming corrective action had been taken - put the system to the test.
  • Instead police need to be able to apply corrective measures before troublemakers turn to crime. Times, Sunday Times
  • He no longer sees computers as aids but as correctives, ways of ‘fixing’ past movies.
  • People suffering from refractive errors have to wear corrective lenses if they want to see things clearly.
  • (The child_lit railings about whether it was a corrective or a confirmation of the Potter series '"heteronormativity" left me untouched; the only flag you need to fly is your own). Archive 2007-10-01
  • Cobalt, chromium, manganese, molybdenum and nickel are sometimes added as correctives for iron; their addition also improves strength at high temperature.
  • [10] Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) was the first kind of corrective eye surgery to involve a laser. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • Although there were several factors contributing to these fatalities, the grand jury reasonably inferred that defendants 'conduct in dismantling the standpipe and the failing to take corrective action was an actual contributory cause of the deaths," Uviller wrote. Ruling Expected In Deutsche Bank Fire Case
  • Yet he does see politically engaged art as a partial corrective to the bankrupt aestheticism of much mainstream art.
  • Scientific institutions have been reluctant to take corrective action.
  • The relatively continuous use of standard system outputs to determine the necessity for corrective action.
  • Because the farmers allowed above are serious, we request, further, that your testing positive for drug test augmentin include a anhydro of move to acetoacetate truthful, non-misleading, and differant corrective rayos about the polyps regressed in this speciality to the audience (s) that received the inactive promotional materials. Wii-volution
  • On December 29, 2009, the NYC Board of Health returned to the kitchen and found the corrective action taken to be effective and the kitchen passed its reinspection. Reuters Food Now 'Clean, Safe, and High-Quality'
  • After the surgery, I definitely saw better - my previous vision had been -7 and -7.5 with severe astigmatism, which is a short step away from being totally non-functional - but after two weeks, I went back in for another corrective round. Nad hen j��c eto
  • Now I've enjoyed the crystal dresses and the holographic goggles, the gratuitous body painting and the unsettling way you share your crotch with the audience but visible corrective undergarments is where I have to shut this space shuttle to the cockeye-ded fool down, silly! FASHION INDIE » FASHION PORN
  • Everyone knows baby boomers will strain future budgets, yet there's no clamor for corrective policies.
  • If this is part of the reason the anecdote raises a smile, comedy would seem to be functioning here at its moral, corrective level, scuffing the shine on vanity and entrapping the diabolical self.
  • This is certainly the case with headaches, and it should result in some corrective action. Banish Headaches -how to obtain fast, drug-free relief from headache
  • More surprising, at least to those who presumed her well-aired feminist principles to have been a continual corrective to Blair's masonic/lubricious tendencies, Cherie Blair appears to have been equally impressed by displays of New Labour virility, twitting her husband on the contrast with his own probable timidity: "John's just a man. What woman could ever compete with Tony 'cojones' Blair?
  • These external agents are beyond organizational control and, hence, ostensibly immune to corrective action.
  • We can all build constructive, and ever more fulfilling ways of life by learning to constantly identify our fears and insufficiencies and then taking concrete, corrective action.
  • The rights of gays are enshrined in the country's constitution, but the murder of homosexuals and the "corrective rape" of lesbians often feature in the headlines; now, the city's "moffie culture" - a term for the mainly coloured, or mixed race, transvestites - is managing to transcend these barriers to a degree. IRIN
  • This information could then be used by those controlling the production process to take appropriate corrective action.
  • I should like to add a corrective to what I have written previously.
  • This is a crucial corrective and challenge to hermetic studies of texts written by Americans.
  • Literacy also is corrective treatment for mistaken belief in absurdities -- do you agree? How not to recall a Portland mayor (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • Finding that the “empathical link existing between human and other living beings” cannot be reliably counted on to spur people to take corrective measures, will they then commission the services of genetic engineers to enable the plants to produce an antidote in pollen form and to release it when needed whether one wants to be cured or not? My Garden Is Telling Me That I'm Abusing My Kids
  • The ligating structure includes a channel (48) that is configured to receive a corrective device (16) therein and to restrict the corrective device from movement relative to the tooth bonding pad.
  • Even if the government finds out ways to prevent litigants taking upper hand in the days to come, it will be too late to take correctives in the short run.
  • For example, a short-sighted person might meet one test for disability, whilst with corrective lenses few would regard his myopia as a disability.
  • Smith Junior High received the highest rating by the state, or "excelling," yet did not meet federal standards, putting it in "corrective action" this year. Azcentral.com | news
  • Putting things right, of course, is integral to quality improvement and this is where the corrective action teams come in.
  • The relatively continuous use of standard system outputs to determine the necessity for corrective action.
  • Economists in Paris warned of a dangerous inflationary spiral unless emergency corrective action was taken.
  • Off the gas, gentle steering correction; the vehicle responds admirably to corrective action.
  • These artefacts are correctives to the usual view of these people as completely uncivilized.
  • About 100,000 people who are tired of wearing glasses or contact lenses undergo corrective laser eye surgery in the UK every year.
  • Also, the section on teaching and preaching is a necessary corrective to some trends in church planting today. Christianity Today
  • Transition to Christianity: Art of Late Antiquity, 3rd - 7th Century A.D." offers a corrective to the rampant consumerism of our day with a condign lesson in Christianity's classical roots and intense devotions while also reminding us that a trade in objects flourished from its earliest times. Transformational Objects
  • If a plan of corrective action is needed, the instructions and time frame are explained.
  • In the first part the narrators reveal and analyze their own natures as well as their corrective visions of the world.
  • In doing so, he offers important correctives to the seminal work on the subject undertaken by Dieter Langewiesche, and a bold new statement of the role played by migration in 19th century society.
  • Greene's important critique of the literature on African ethnicities singles out the dominant work on ethnicity in patrilineal southern Africa, and suggests a corrective approach that is much needed in this highly politicized subfield. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • Notice discrepancy to QA supervisor and related departments for corrective actions.
  • I should like to add a corrective to what I have written previously.
  • Some of its enduring figures fear a catastrophic future unless corrective action is swift. Times, Sunday Times
  • A recidivist demonstrates his tattoos while his cellmates give a coarse laugh. The corrective labor colony in Kovrov (240 km from Moscow), 1993.
  • But the House has already adjourned, meaning any corrective action will have to be applied after the fact. Veterans Today
  • Hence the importance of directing part of the control process to the implementation of appropriate corrective action. 4.
  • Some feminist psychologists have even developed a kind of biological egalitarianism as a corrective to psychology's male-oriented biological theories.
  • Marcella explains why: The tart corrective of the capers is just what the carrots need to add a little zip to their otherwise passive sweetness. Archive 2008-05-01
  • When the writer of Hebrews pointed out that no discipline seems pleasant at the time, he was referring to corrective discipline, and he was essentially saying that if correction is not painful to the person corrected, it will have no effect. Parenting by the Book
  • But the justice which respects things done is either that of government, or jurisdiction or judgment; and this, again, they affirm to be either remunerative or corrective, but that corrective is either castigatory or vindicatory. A Dissertation on Divine Justice
  • This significant issue - the unauthorized disclosure of classified intelligence - has been extraordinarily resistant to correctives.
  • Doctors performed corrective surgery to restore his sight.
  • My goal, therefore, is to read these two theorists as potential correctives to one another.
  • He said that had ‘exacerbated the losses by delaying and distracting the board from swift and corrective action’.
  • He is able to offer a useful corrective to the often blinkered view of what the subject is about. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The computers get their marching orders from the pilot by means of a pair of joysticks, but they won't wait for the pilot's slow reflexes to kick in before taking any necessary corrective action.
  • There are few self-confessed purists among the critics of the English language today; purism is generally a negative term, and by and large purists are regarded as hypercorrective extremists.
  • Last night there was evidence of corrective action having been taken. Times, Sunday Times
  • Protective goggles are necessary in an industrial environment, and may be corrective or non-corrective.
  • To be fair, it had let expenditure run away last year and had to take corrective action. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is a useful corrective against smugness. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although Burke's conventional definition of synecdoche (a part for the whole) sounds strikingly similar to metonymy, it functions for him as a corrective to metonymical excess.
  • There is little overt corrective feedback and little in the way of overt diagnoses about what the student is doing wrong. Advanced Educational Psychology For Educators, Researchers and Policymakers,
  • She then moves to discuss her second theme, how liturgy establishes community, a necessary corrective in a time when many concentrate on more individualistic expressions of spirituality.
  • The victim is offered restitution tentatively, with little confidence that it will be accepted - and finally with little confidence that correctives are possible.
  • In the Soviet Union, Lenin greatly enlarged the Tzarist forced labour camps, which were renamed Gulags (Russian acronym for the Main Administration of Corrective Labour Camps) in 1930.
  • Lesson: even if the law intervenes, there will be a Coasean corrective transaction: smooth, immediate, and costless to the employer. Archive 2009-08-01
  • In 11 short pages Boulding gave an account of the economy and its relation to the environment that distinguished between open and closed systems in relation to matter, energy, and information; described the economy as a sub-system of the biosphere; considered the significance of the second law of thermodynamics for energy, matter and information and the extent to which they are subject to entropic processes; argued that knowledge or information is the key to economic development; noted that fossil fuels are a short-term exhaustible supplement to solar energy and that fission energy does not change this picture; considered the prospects for much better use of solar energy enhanced perhaps by the biological revolution; argued that human welfare may be better understood as a stock rather than a flow; presented an ethical basis for conservation; acknowledged that human impacts on the environment have spread from the local to the global; observed the limited contribution that corrective taxation might play; and commented that technological change has become distorted through planned obsolescence, competitive advertising, poor quality, and a lack of durability. Herman Daly Festschrift~ Herman Daly and the Steady State Economy
  • It is only when it is present in large numbers that there is a need to take corrective action.
  • President Obama has been only concerned with speed rather than long term corrective actions. The Burning Platform
  • Now she needs corrective surgery to remove all the excess skin. The Sun
  • This brief citation of four major mistakes - I do not pretend that they are all - but this brief citation of four will help, I hope, to point the way to certain corrective measures. Our National Task
  • Corrective justice links two parties and no more because a relationship of correlativity is necessarily bipolar.
  • Many falls result from trips and slips when the impaired balance of an elderly person prevents swift corrective action.
  • In many cases, the two combine to cancel one another (bottom right), so corrective surgery based on topographical measurements of corneal aberrations is not optimum.
  • No amount of corrective surgery can fix that. Times, Sunday Times
  • What I think is that we are dealing with a sick patient, one apt to slide back into the same old destructive habits without some firm and concrete correctives in place.
  • Scientific institutions have been reluctant to take corrective action.
  • You can concentrate your attentions on the feel and fit rather than any corrective properties of the shoe.
  • Corrective action will be taken on all the leaking light ballasts. PCB Leaks Found in 3 More Schools
  • The air is temperately cold and moist, and for a corrective the natives use a dose of usquebaugh.
  • The relatively continuous use of standard system outputs to determine the necessity for corrective action.
  • Then a fourth was needed for further corrective surgery. The Sun
  • The principal printed out her entries, made her do corrective work order, and even sent her for counselling.
  • Drives continuous improvement and coordinates supplier non - conforming corrective actions ( NCCA ).
  • After a careful diagnosis he is able to prescribe intelligently the best remedial or corrective measures.
  • By middle age, most farsighted people need corrective lenses to improve their near vision.
  • Few people realize that a receding chin is quite easily amenable to corrective surgery.
  • THIS STUDY randomly assigned 88 children, 7 to 12 years old, who were wearing corrective lenses because of amblyopia caused by differing degrees of near- or farsightedness, known as anisometropia, to one of two treatment groups. Quick Study: Acupuncture helps some kids with lazy eye
  • The necessary correctives, after all, would have to be brutal.
  • He is able to offer a useful corrective to the often blinkered view of what the subject is about. The Times Literary Supplement
  • I've been nearsighted most of my life and have needed corrective lenses since age six, but on the other elements of vision I do quite well.
  • Everybody chopped and changed instruments throughout, which provided a natural corrective to any tendency for the performance to get too slick. Times, Sunday Times
  • They suggested that the abundant deer might eventually deplete the plateau of edible vegetation, but neither the Forest Service nor the Park Service took any corrective action for a number of reasons. Have we forgotten what happened at Kaibab??
  • Stone's analysis of the legislation provides a valuable corrective to those who have argued that it represented a revolutionary change.
  • Usually, no such corrective is available in politics. Notes on Critical Review's Converse issue, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Other twentieth-century writers and folklorists provided correctives to these distorted images, however.
  • It is plausible that this tendency in memoir literature reflects the corrective mode of the middle class through which it tried to vindicate its self-image.
  • The various operations performed on these patients were corrective operations for cyanotic heart disease such as tetralogy of Fallot, tricuspid atresia, pulmonary atresia and transposition of great vessels.
  • Lord Mansfield makes the same observation with regard to another corrective of the short mode of trial, -- that of a _new trial_. The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 11 (of 12)
  • It's a way to identify on which foot you apply more pressure and could mean that you need corrective trainers. Times, Sunday Times
  • His whole activity is a seeking for causes; and in the very act of undertaking to "humble reason" he proceeds to instruct and re-edify it by endless corrective comparison of facts. Montaigne and Shakspere
  • Monitoring the time and budget of each chunk allows us to identify problems and take corrective action.
  • For punishment to be effective in deterring crime and changing behaviour, it must be swift, certain and corrective. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then representatives visit the site and make recommendations on corrective measures to put things right.
  • It is both enjoyable and a corrective to stereotyped views of the ' plight ' of women writers in the period.
  • So the proposed corrective is overwhelmingly likely not to work. Balkinization
  • The next step is to investigate the cause of any bad samples and perform corrective action, such as disinfecting and flushing the system. Kansas City infoZine Headlines
  • Doctors performed corrective surgery to restore his sight.
  • Rather, it is an attempt to posit some correctives to the discourse.
  • It is possible to do corrective surgery on the eyes to take care of the problem.
  • Why wasn't I hurrying to a phone to call and get corrective instructions to the appropriate building?
  • Abramoff, who might as well add the phrase "disgraced superlobbyist" to his legal name, has written a tome that promises to be, according to a publisher's blurb, a "corrective" account of his much-chronicled scandal, our colleague The Washington Post: National, World & D.C. Area News and Headlines - The Washington Post
  • Surgery is not the buzz kill it once was, and corrective operations and medicine can prolong careers.
  • Corrective helmets can also be used to treat more severe cases of deformational plagiocephaly or those diagnosed later. The Beauty of Love
  • To follow up an in - house quality complaints thru supplier to maintain corrective action and preventive action.
  • In the first part the narrators reveal and analyze their own natures as well as their corrective visions of the world.
  • Dr. A reports on the progress of Naseem Hasni, born on Halloween, who's currently undergoing corrective surgery for this condition, and he includes a video clip about a young man named Christopher Wall, born in 1975, who when the clip was filmed held the record for being the longest-lived ectopia cordis patient. Archive 2006-11-01
  • These are not corrective action but face-saving and delay tactics.
  • Some feminist psychologists have even developed a kind of biological egalitarianism as a corrective to psychology's male-oriented biological theories.
  • Webster's online dictionary defines the word ‘crusade’ as a corrective enterprise, which is undertaken with zeal and enthusiasm.
  • Hence the importance of directing part of the control process to the implementation of appropriate corrective action. 4.
  • Paul writes a letter of ironic rebuke, using corrective language and ridicule, much like a parent finding a child in a compromising situation.
  • And such a welcome corrective to the widely held notion that being middle aged is ghastly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Monitoring the time and budget of each chunk allows us to identify problems and take corrective action.
  • By spending time on preventive maintenance now, you can save time on corrective maintenance in the future.
  • NOTE Cycle time related to rejected product analysis should be consistent with determination of root cause, corrective action and monitoring the effectiveness of implementation.
  • This form of production is unique to Ireland and these farmers are facing a very uncertain future unless corrective action is taken.
  • For punishment to be effective in deterring crime and changing behaviour, it must be swift, certain and corrective. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was felt, however, that keeping American soldiers out of German billets, which had not been done after World War One, would serve as a necessary corrective.
  • After all, the amateur investigator is bound to make mistakes, and needs the corrective hand of those who have continuous experience and a practiced skill.
  • Moreover each, again in different ways, provide a valuable corrective to a good deal of the technocentric and the ecocentric thinking which currently animates the environmental debate.
  • After all, the amateur investigator is bound to make mistakes, and needs the corrective hand of those who have continuous experience and a practiced skill.
  • As the data sheet is printed, any nonconforming numbers appear in red for easy identification and trigger corrective action.
  • One suspects that, despite his protestation that we don't necessarily need a "lesson" from such a novel as The Kindly Ones, Bukiet would prefer that its unmediated access to the point of view of a morally compromised protagonist be placed in a more didactically clear context as a corrective to "wallowing. Furies
  • All of the correctives that I have presented here have been discussed before, and all of them are in the pieces cited by the critics of evolutionary psychology.
  • People with long-sightedness usually need to wear corrective eyewear such as glasses or contact lenses to read, write and carry out detailed tasks.
  • He has received extensive corrective surgery to his skull.
  • Thirdly, our work hints at corrective techniques that might be used to counteract prognostic error.
  • These are equipped with rubber eyecups which may be folded down for use with corrective lenses.
  • People with long-sightedness usually need to wear corrective eyewear such as glasses or contact lenses to read, write and carry out detailed tasks.
  • It may be that the best corrective to them arises from frequent interaction with a more benign reality.
  • The relatively continuous use of standard system outputs to determine the necessity for corrective action.
  • The requirement is viewed as a social corrective action rather than a burden on employers, as handicapped persons make up a trained and qualified work force.
  • We have implemented corrective action for all those possible causes.
  • The report he submitted to his superiors accurately reflected the poor state of Volunteer morale and the need for immediate corrective action.
  • And of course later on I was concerned in appearing for the Department [of Corrective Services] in some prison riots where the prisoners had been badly bashed.
  • The hoped-for corrective is "Pacific Standard Time," a Getty-encouraged, Getty-subsidized nearly $10 million in grants collaboration among 60 Southern California institutions resulting in a smorgasbord of everything from handcrafted furniture to hard-edge painting, from guerrilla street performances to sculpture in aerospace materials—all made in California over the past 70 years or so—in shows rolling out over the next six months. Laying Claim to Its Place in the Sun
  • The past dead ends of science may not be relevant for a science class, but they are quite relevant for a *history of science* or *philosophy of science* class, as a corrective to the notion that science is a linear progression of successful theories. An Atheist Defends Intelligent-Design Creationism - The Panda's Thumb
  • Minor corrective surgery can help and some understanding reassurance could help your wife too. The Sun
  • Participants with less than 20/20 vision uncorrected wore their corrective lenses/glasses during the experiment.
  • I take Dennis Kucinich's word that the unpitted olive in the sandwich he bought from the Longsworth Building cafeteria three years ago really has caused him a lot of dental damage, requiring expensive corrective procedures resulting in a lot of pain. The case of the olive
  • Three months after the accident, the United States FAA issued an Airworthiness Directive that "required the deactivation of all electrically controlled B767… thrust reversers until corrective actions were identified to prevent uncommanded in-flight thrust reverser deployment" (as summarized in Thai Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee report, 2.5.4, paragraph 4). There Is Nothing Left To Do But Care
  • Finally, it would appear to me that in the process of introducing correctives to the earlier literature on Japanese managerial practices the authors may have slightly erred.
  • Poorly designed policies can delay corrective steps and create monopoly.
  • the teacher's action was corrective rather than instructional
  • At the heart of the book is James's description of the democratic temperament, which I take to be a healthy corrective to the distemper that characterizes so much of politics today.
  • Hence the importance of directing part of the control process to the implementation of appropriate corrective action. 4.
  • A compulsive, coactive, punitive, or corrective power, formally political, is also granted to the political magistrate in matters of religion, in reference to all sorts of persons and things under his jurisdiction. The Divine Right of Church Government by Sundry Ministers Of Christ Within The City Of London
  • If ametropic, corrective lenses are necessary, and duplicate spectacles must be in charge of a nurse. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • Works by artists working in a naturalistic style, such as the Spaniards Ramon Casas and Santiago Rusinol, are a corrective to our notions received from the more familiar and colourful views of the Impressionists and their heirs.
  • These correctives guard against excessive romanticisation of the ancient Olympics, thereby setting an impossible ethical hurdle against which the modern Games will always fail.
  • corrective measures
  • He had corrective surgery for the atrioventricular septal defect at 3 years of age.
  • The order is taken to be a warrant committing the prisoner into custody for the Corrective Services Act.
  • For the general practitioner a well-used library is one of the few correctives of the premature senility which is so apt to overtake him.
  • Shimer contacted former bobsledder-turned-doctor Scott Stoll, who knew of a procedure, not yet FDA-approved, in which corrective lenses are implanted behind the irises. Can Steven Holcomb and 'Night Train' reach victory lane?
  • But the justice which respects things done is either that of government, or jurisdiction or judgment; and this, again, they affirm to be either remunerative or corrective, but that corrective is either castigatory or vindicatory. A Dissertation on Divine Justice
  • Taking Corrective Action Corrective action should be taken if performance falls short of standards and the analysis indicates that action is required.
  • Nor have corrective political and philosophical analyses carried the day.
  • Project Managers make extra efforts in codifying the mistakes made and corrective steps taken before any project is closed out.
  • But this week there is evidence of corrective action having been taken. Times, Sunday Times
  • [11] Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) was the first kind of corrective eye surgery to involve a laser. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • You call it "retaliation," but in most circles it would be simply corrective action. Another Government Report Supports Sternberg
  • In other words, military service would equal corrective discipline.
  • It can then pass on operator instructions and corrective actions to the ‘guilty’ machine.
  • Zara stayed there for a month until just before Christmas then returned to Birmingham for corrective surgery on her gastric bypass.
  • While this survey cannot empirically offer definitive conclusions for the cultural operation of the talk show genre at large, a number of significant patterns may provide correctives for the bulk of literature on this genre.
  • Voluntary recall from consumers and corrective actions taken by the importer.
  • These stories are more explicit and more didactic, probably because they are more self-consciously in-tended as correctives.
  • Although the term has multifaceted significance, we begin with a text in which it appears as a rebuke and corrective. THE NAMES OF JESUS
  • It is a funny corrective (if that's what it is) to the master noticer trend of House and Monk. This Blog Sits at the
  • Corrective lenses such as contact lenses or glasses can usually correct vision in people with astigmatism.
  • Many falls result from trips and slips when the impaired balance of an elderly person prevents swift corrective action.
  • The current overbought/oversold situation for the major indices suggests that while there is some upside potential in this market, it comes with the risk of short-term corrective phases. Overbought Bull Could Slip From Highs
  • corrective lenses

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