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Discover LudwigThe word "Fickle" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used to describe someone or something that is changeable or inconsistent, especially in their loyalties or affections. Example: "Her fickle nature made it difficult for her friends to trust her decisions."
Dictionary
Fickle
adjective
Quick to change one's opinion or allegiance; insincere; not loyal or reliable.
Exact(60)
As someone who has experienced the music industry first hand, the points O'Connor made about its fickle nature and how hyper-sexualisation of women roars throughout, to some extent, are correct.
But the Tea Party's fickle and hive-like nature virtually demands that Cruz cycle out of the spotlight eventually.
Trying to be down with the kids has often left film-makers lost, desperately appealing to a fickle audience who are busy moving on to the next craze.
So of the moment that it felt dated a month after release, its fickle intended audience failed to hURL themselves out of bed to bother watching it and it became a fascinating 90s relic, complete with three unwanted soundtracks.
Scales can seem extraordinary fickle at times, with weight fluctuating by nearly 1kg from day to day.
Analysts consistently warn that while Sisi currently has the backing of many sections of society, the electorate has proved fickle in the recent past.
Thus the fickle finger of fate swings again, with Piers as a Time Lord of Liberty.
Barclays' forecasters should have been more alert to the regulatory dangers but everybody was caught out by fickle FICC.
The pitch was too fickle, the ball swung, the Australians were on top, the situation of being 92 runs behind and three wickets left was too desperate: all-out attack it had to be.
But Egyptians have proven themselves fickle in their support for public figures".
One thing that can never be taken away, however, is the surrealist vision of climate campaigner and former US vice president Al Gore standing with Clive Palmer to endorse the fickle policy hopes of the latter - a man who wants to mine 40 million tonnes of coal from Queensland's Galilee Basin and in so doing liberate an estimated 3,291 million tonnes of CO2-e into the atmosphere over 30 years.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com