0 (the quality of often having) a sudden and usually silly wish to have or do something, or a sudden and silly change of mind or behaviour -- 異想天開;反覆無常;突發奇想
But how to rescue the discourse from charges that it will be meaningless, trivial, and inconsistent, dependent on the caprice of conversation itself?
They promise 'a portrait of orderly aggregate behaviour without challenging the consensus that individual behaviour involves large elements of caprice and disorder' (p.xx).
Aesthetic values attend upon the caprice of the financially successful.
I dream of dramelyriqueas human, without giving up either fantasy, or caprice, or mystery.
He defined education as self-estrangement, ' ' the process of the adoption of the social order in place of one's mere animal caprice.
Her conduct is marked by extreme waywardness and caprice.
He reasons that, as architects are not artists, they must be concerned with producing drawings which communicate building not caprice.
It is not, that is to say, subject to human caprice.
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异想天开, 反复无常, 突发奇想…
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capricho, antojo…
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caprice, capriccio…
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ragam tidak menentu, rentak ragam…
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die Laune, die Caprice…
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innfall, påfunn, lune…
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lunefuldt indfald, fiks ide, let…
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