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    fick·le
    /ˈfik(ə)l/

    adjective

    • 1. changing frequently, especially as regards one's loyalties, interests, or affection: "Web patrons are a notoriously fickle lot, bouncing from one site to another on a whim"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of FICKLE is marked by lack of steadfastness, constancy, or stability : given to erratic changeableness. How to use fickle in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Fickle.

  3. FICKLE definition: 1. likely to change your opinion or your feelings suddenly and without a good reason: 2. Fickle…. Learn more.

  4. Fickle comes from the Old English word ficol, for deceitful. We usually use fickle to talk about people, but it can also be used for abstract things that alternately favor you and abuse you, like the weather.

  5. Fickle definition: likely to change, especially due to caprice, irresolution, or instability; casually changeable. See examples of FICKLE used in a sentence.

  6. adj. 1. not constant or loyal in affections. 2. likely to change, esp. due to caprice, irresolution, or instability; casually changeable: fickle weather. [before 1000; Middle English fikel, Old English ficol deceitful] fick′le•ness, n.

  7. (disapproving) changing often and suddenly. The weather here is notoriously fickle. Such is life in the fickle world of fashion. The latest downturn in sales shows just what a fickle business this is. the fickle finger of fate. Always be properly dressed and prepared to cope with our fickle weather. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

  8. 1. adjective. If you describe someone as fickle, you disapprove of them because they keep changing their mind about what they like or want. [disapproval] The group has been notoriously fickle in the past. 2. adjective. If you say that something is fickle, you mean that it often changes and is unreliable. New England's weather can be fickle.

  9. 1. If you describe someone as fickle, you disapprove of them because they keep changing their mind about what they like or want. [disapproval] [...] 2. If you say that something is fickle, you mean that it often changes and is unreliable. [...] More. Synonyms of 'fickle' • capricious, variable, volatile, unpredictable [...] More.

  10. Synonyms for FICKLE: volatile, unpredictable, changeful, unstable, inconsistent, variable, mercurial, uncertain; Antonyms of FICKLE: constant, certain, stable, predictable, steady, unchanging, immutable, invariable

  11. Fickle implies an underlying perversity as a cause for the lack of stability: the fickle seasons, disappointing as often as they delight; once lionized, now rejected by a fickle public. Inconstant suggests an innate disposition to change: an inconstant lover, flitting from affair to affair.

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