Chiefly in pl. corrigenda. [L. corrigendum that which is to be corrected, gerundive of corrig·ĕre to CORRECT: see prec.] Something requiring correction; in pl. errors or faults in a printed book, etc., of which the corrections are given.
1805. Evening Post, 13 Dec., 2/5. CorrigendumThe blunder of a compositor made the first sentence of the editorial article unintelligible.
1841. A. Judson, in Wayland, Mem. Judson (1853), II. v. 170. I received thankfully yours of 28th January, accompanied by a list of corrigenda.
1883. Law Times, 20 Oct., 405/2. There are five and a half pages of corrigenda.