liable to error or mistake
51fallible — I adjective deficient, errable, errant, erring, errori obnoxius, faulty, flawed, imperfect, liable to be erroneous, liable to mistake, not perfect, prone to error, prone to inaccuracy, uncertain, undependable, unpredictable, unreliable, unstable …
52Crime — Criminal redirects here. For other uses, see Crime (disambiguation). Justice and Divine Vengeance in pursuit of Crime  1808 oil on canvas …
53John Wycliffe — John Wickliffe redirects here. For the ship, see John Wickliffe (ship). John Wycliffe Full name John Wycliffe Born c. 1328 Ipreswell, England Died 31 December 1384 …
54Fred Malek — Frederic Fred V. Malek (born December 22, 1936) is an American businessman and former assistant to United States presidents George H.W. Bush and Richard Nixon. He is currently a national finance committee co chair of John McCain s presidential… …
55contract — contractee, n. contractible, adj. contractibility, contractibleness, n. contractibly, adv. n., adj., and usu. for v. 16 18, 22, 23 /kon trakt/; otherwise v. /keuhn trakt /, n. 1. an agreement between two or more parties for the doing or not doing …
56Religious Life — • Overview and evangelical ideas on what makes up religious life Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Religious Life Religious Life …
57consent — con·sent n 1 a: compliance in or approval of what is done or proposed by another; specif: the voluntary agreement or acquiescence by a person of age or with requisite mental capacity who is not under duress or coercion and usu. who has knowledge… …
58Benzylpiperazine — Systematic (IUPAC) name 1 benzylpiperazine …
59United States v. Reynolds — Infobox SCOTUS case Litigants = United States v. Reynolds ArgueDate = October 21 ArgueYear = 1952 DecideDate = March 9 DecideYear = 1953 FullName = United States v. Reynolds, Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit… …
60Direct debit — A direct debit or direct withdrawal is an instruction that a bank account holder gives to his or her bank to collect an amount directly from another account. It is similar to a direct deposit but initiated by the beneficiary. It is also called… …