Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
"The thing about e-mail is you do things a little bit more capriciously."
But he must understand that I was not being capriciously cruel.
What politicians give, for whatever good or bad reasons, they can as capriciously take away.
Was he now to present his own bracelet even more capriciously, simply because a woman asked for it?
The fact was that disease played with us capriciously very much as the winds did.
But she knew all too well how quickly, how capriciously her world could be turned on its head again.
We can have a safe society where the civil rights of individual citizens are not capriciously violated.
A student who is put on medication is done so capriciously.
To the left ran a line of mountains capriciously shaped, lying in the full light.
Then the level of the bank would sink capriciously.
She could turn her favor on and off capriciously, driving the male to distraction.
You should not capriciously refuse to write such letters, of course; do so only when high principles are involved.
My brother and I have not acted capriciously or malevolently.
He could hurt capriciously, pointlessly, even against his own interests.
It was humans like you who showed him that society did not really care if robots were killed capriciously.
Arrived at the door, the impulse capriciously left her.
They would not throw away that leverage so capriciously.
But, after all, perhaps one ought not to wonder too much that material things should thus capriciously vanish.
Several suggested that the legal system had overreacted and perhaps acted capriciously.
Naturally I came here after work, knowing that she would not ask such a favor capriciously."
In dreams she still sometimes felt as if the world was on the verge of shifting capriciously, without warning.
Before long, however, the king capriciously withdrew his license for the consecration.
"It has not been undertaken capriciously or contrary to good thinking, but to change the stigma.
As in other situations, the general duty not to act arbitrarily or capriciously will apply.
"Alcoholic" is quite often used capriciously, to denote that a person drinks a lot.