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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 2, 2015 is:
capricious \kuh-PRISH-us\ adjective
: governed or characterized by caprice : impulsive, unpredictable
Examples:
The court ruled that the punishment was arbitrary and capricious.
"Some of her songs are humorous, even capricious, though many reflect on the more hidden of life's injustices." - St. Augustine (Florida) Record, February 27, 2015
Did you know?
The noun caprice, which first appeared in English in the mid-17th century, is a synonym of whim. Evidence shows that the adjective capricious debuted about sixty years before caprice; it's likely, however, that both words derived via French from the Italian capriccio, which originally referred not to a sudden desire but to a sudden shudder of fear. Capriccio in turn derives from the Italian capo, meaning "head," and riccio, the word for "hedgehog." Someone who shuddered in fear, therefore, was said to have a "hedgehog head"-meaning that his or her hair stood on end like the spines of a hedgehog.
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