capriciousness / kəˈprɪʃ əs, -ˈpri ʃəs /

任性任性妄为任意性摩羯座

capriciousness 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. subject to, led by, or indicative of a sudden, odd notion or unpredictable change; erratic: He's such a capricious boss I never know how he'll react.
  2. Obsolete. fanciful or witty.

capriciousness 近义词

capriciousness

等同于 instability

capriciousness

等同于 insecureness

capriciousness

等同于 precariousness

capriciousness

等同于 quirkiness

capriciousness

等同于 ricketiness

capriciousness

等同于 flightiness

capriciousness

等同于 shakiness

capriciousness

等同于 singularity

capriciousness

等同于 unstableness

capriciousness

等同于 unsteadiness

capriciousness

等同于 unsureness

capriciousness

等同于 eccentricity

更多capriciousness例句

  1. The NBA, spinning in a vicious, capricious cycle, would be better if it worked again.
  2. There’s not much evidence that the women who eventually profited from Millar’s capricious bequest were even trying to compete — they just birthed a bunch of kids during that decade.
  3. Investors may be capricious, but the market’s math is a stubborn thing.
  4. This year has been one of the most uncertain and capricious years ever for eCommerce.
  5. When Will Rodriguez-Kennedy ran to lead the San Diego County Democratic Party, he promised a new and less capricious system of prioritizing the various local races each election cycle.
  6. More than anything, they reflect our uneasiness with the modern world, its complexity, and often its capriciousness.
  7. Purges must go too far, because extreme capriciousness is what stops the frenzy.
  8. Valeria, with her wonted capriciousness, veered round in defence of the institution that she had been just jeering at.
  9. The Bay tree gives us a curious instance of the capriciousness of English plant names.
  10. Their requests are granted or refused with absolute capriciousness.
  11. But they are not full of it; it comes only now and then, with tantalizing capriciousness.
  12. These gave the horse the reputation of capriciousness and unreliability.