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All caprice synonyms

ca·price
C c

noun caprice

  • fickle — Changing frequently, esp. as regards one's loyalties, interests, or affection.
  • fitful — coming, appearing, acting, etc., in fits or by spells; recurring irregularly.
  • inconstancy — not constant; changeable; fickle; variable: an inconstant friend.
  • whim — an odd or capricious notion or desire; a sudden or freakish fancy: a sudden whim to take a midnight walk.
  • freak — a fleck or streak of color.
  • crotchet — A crotchet is a musical note that has a time value equal to two quavers.
  • whimsy — capricious humor or disposition; extravagant, fanciful, or excessively playful expression: a play with lots of whimsy.
  • fancy — imagination or fantasy, especially as exercised in a capricious manner.
  • peculiarity — a trait, manner, characteristic, or habit that is odd or unusual.
  • rib — one of a series of curved bones that are articulated with the vertebrae and occur in pairs, 12 in humans, on each side of the vertebrate body, certain pairs being connected with the sternum and forming the thoracic wall.
  • caper — Capers are the small green buds of caper plants. They are usually sold preserved in vinegar.
  • humor — hacker humour
  • mood — Grammar. a set of categories for which the verb is inflected in many languages, and that is typically used to indicate the syntactic relation of the clause in which the verb occurs to other clauses in the sentence, or the attitude of the speaker toward what he or she is saying, as certainty or uncertainty, wish or command, emphasis or hesitancy. a set of syntactic devices in some languages that is similar to this set in function or meaning, involving the use of auxiliary words, as can, may, might. any of the categories of these sets: the Latin indicative, imperative, and subjunctive moods.
  • vein — one of the system of branching vessels or tubes conveying blood from various parts of the body to the heart.
  • inconsistency — the quality or condition of being inconsistent.
  • contrariety — opposition between one thing and another; disagreement
  • jerk — to move with a quick, sharp motion; move spasmodically.
  • quirk — a peculiarity of action, behavior, or personality; mannerism: He is full of strange quirks.
  • perversity — the state or quality of being perverse.
  • impulse — the influence of a particular feeling, mental state, etc.: to act under a generous impulse; to strike out at someone from an angry impulse.
  • gag — to introduce usually comic interpolations into (a script, an actor's part, or the like) (usually followed by up).
  • fad — a temporary fashion, notion, manner of conduct, etc., especially one followed enthusiastically by a group.
  • vagary — an unpredictable or erratic action, occurrence, course, or instance: the vagaries of weather; the vagaries of the economic scene.
  • temper — a particular state of mind or feelings.
  • kink — a twist or curl, as in a thread, rope, wire, or hair, caused by its doubling or bending upon itself.
  • bee — A bee is an insect with a yellow-and-black striped body that makes a buzzing noise as it flies. Bees make honey, and can sting.
  • thought — Informal. the act or a period of thinking: I want to sit down and give it a good think.
  • notion — a general understanding; vague or imperfect conception or idea of something: a notion of how something should be done.
  • put on — a throw or cast, especially one made with a forward motion of the hand when raised close to the shoulder.
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