caprichoso
capricious ; whimsical ; wayward ; fickle ; wanton ; faddish ; flighty ; faddy ; inconstant.
Panizzi introduced what seemed to his critics unwarranted and capricious complications calculated to make the catalog much more difficult for the librarian to prepare and the reader to use.
This slightly off-balance, whimsical remark was a Marsha James' trademark.
The article 'The wayward scholar: resources and research in popular culture' defends popular culture as a legitimate and important library resource.
The rise and dramatic fall of E-businesses is a testimony of the fickle electronic commerce (E-commerce) market.
The book focuses on images where hideous atrocities - e.g., murder, blasphemy, wanton destruction and even cannibalism - are shown to be part of the daily life of the common people of Paris during the revolution.
Whilst, presumably, a set of standards for the conduct of reference work, the document is in fact a hodgepodge shaped by faddish misconceptions.
'Anyway, to make a long story short, Huish said he knows Lisa has been a little flighty at times'.
These emotions will have a knock-on effect on the child and may, in the case of the faddy eater, cause the situation to deteriorate.
His inconstant and bizarre behavior in a crisis makes me more convinced than ever that he's not mentally fit to hold the office.
de forma caprichosa
capriciously
She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.
de modo caprichoso
capriciously
She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.