- unpredictably; "the weather has been freakishly variable"
- in a capricious manner; "there were Turk's head lilies and patches of iris , islands of brilliant blue set capriciously in the green sea"
- changeable; "a capricious summer breeze"; "freakish weather"
- (capricious) determined by chance or impulse or whim rather than by necessity or reason; "a capricious refusal"; "authoritarian rulers are frequently capricious"; "the victim of whimsical persecutions"
- (capriciousness) the quality of being guided by sudden unpredictable impulses
- (capriciousness) flightiness: the trait of acting unpredictably and more from whim or caprice than from reason or judgment; "I despair at the flightiness and whimsicality of my memory"
- (Capricious) *For the card game, see: Capricieuse
- In a capricious manner; without caution or concern
- (capricious) Impulsive and unpredictable; determined by chance, impulse, or whim
- (Capricious) In an ombudsman investigation, "capricious" means that the agency acted at the whim or pleasure of an agency official or employee without regard to any law or controlling principle.
- (capricious (to be -)) (v) qılıq etеrgе, qılıqsızlanırģa
- (capricious) (adj) acting impulsively and whimsically (without care)
- (capricious) (adj.) subject to whim, fickle (The young girl’s capricious tendencies made it difficult for her to focus on achieving her goals.)
- (capricious) (kə-prĭsh′əs or kə-prē′shəs) adj.
- (capricious) To be governed by caprice [from the Latin for "hedgehog's head"; think of spiky-haired idlers like Einstein and Sid Vicious] is to give in to one's every fantastic whim, irresponsible vagary, or irrational desire. ...
- (capricious) adv., adj. unpredictable and subject to whim, often used to refer to judges and judicial decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial procedure. A semi-polite way of saying a judge is inconsistent or erratic.
- (Capriciousness) noun, one who does things at the spur of the moment and unpredictably.