Definitionadj. marked by erratic changeableness in affections or attachments
Last update: July 22, 2015
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Climate at hill stations is very fickle. [adjective]
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He is a fickle minded person. [adjective]
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I 'm sort of a really fickle football fan. [adjective]
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It 's more sheltered in fickle winds, bigger swells or close to high tide. [adjective]
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His quiet melodious voice went further than the Lord-Lieutenant's, because it was new to the air of noise, and that fickle element loves novelty. [adjective]
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Howsomever, she's a weel-educate woman, and an she win to her English, as I hae heard her do at an orra time, she may come to fickle us a'.' [adjective]
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The Persians are fickle and inconstant, lovers of everything new and foreign. [adjective]
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Often an automobile is as fickle as a stage fairy, or appears to be, but it may be that only your own blind stupidity accounts for the lack of efficiency. [adjective]
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Do we not know that man is frail and fickle, that his heart is full of delusions, and that his lips are a distillery of falsehood. [adjective]
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Let Pisistratus' torch burn out, Phanes, and I'll swear that the fickle crowd will flock around the returning nobles, the new light, just as they now do around the tyrant.' [adjective]
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