Sentences with inconstant
in·con·stant
I i - An inconstant friend.
- As it is, the 33-year-old Chet Atkins protege plays classical and finger-style steel-stringed guitar, choices that make for an inconstant fame.
- In contrast are blatantly inconstant constants--for example, the Hubble constant, which measures the rate of the expansion of the universe.
- Torn clothes, and the inconstant heart.
- Inconstant implies an inherent tendency to change or a lack of steadfastness [an inconstant lover]; fickle suggests an even greater instability or readiness to change, especially in affection [spurned by a fickle public]; capricious implies an instability or irregularity that seems to be the product of whim or erratic impulse [a capricious climate]; unstable, in this connection, applies to one who is emotionally unsettled or variable [an unstable person laughs and cries easily]