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Arbitrariness   /ˈɑrbətrˌɛrinəs/   Listen
noun
Arbitrariness  n.  The quality of being arbitrary; despoticalness; tyranny.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Arbitrariness" Quotes from Famous Books



... bustle of the other; at least, as we are so often forced to see it acted. In RICHARD II the weakness of the king leaves us leisure to take a greater interest in the misfortunes of the man. 'After the first act, in which the arbitrariness of his behaviour only proves his want of resolution, we see him staggering under the unlooked-for blows of fortune, bewailing his loss of kingly power; not preventing it, sinking under the aspiring ...
— Characters of Shakespeare's Plays • William Hazlitt

... categories, their arbitrariness and spontaneity, may, however, have this inconvenience, that the categories may be irrelevant to one another no less than to the natural life they ought to express. The experience they respectively synthesise may therefore be no single experience. One pictured ...
— The Life of Reason • George Santayana

... the gift of leadership in a marked degree, and established his authority by a due mixture of kindness and severity. Those boys whom he honored with his confidence were absolutely attached to him. Those whom, with magnificent arbitrariness, he punished and persecuted, felt meekly that they had probably deserved it; and if they had not, it ...
— Boyhood in Norway • Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen

... masculine head, a feminine hand, and a neuter heart."[405] Anglo-Saxon gentlemen were in about the same predicament, before William the Conqueror came in his own way to their help and rescued them from this maze. In the transaction which took place, the Anglo-Saxon and the French both gave up the arbitrariness of their genders; nouns denoting male beings became masculine, those denoting female beings became feminine; all the others became neuter; wife and maiden resumed their sex, while nation, sun and moon were neuter. Nouns and adjectives lost ...
— A Literary History of the English People - From the Origins to the Renaissance • Jean Jules Jusserand

... was a good leader, for he confessed himself a follower in the enterprise which he was in a position absolutely to control. He eagerly availed himself of the suggestions of others, took a quiet and lowly place with entire dignity, and exerted without arbitrariness a determining influence. ...
— Quaker Hill - A Sociological Study • Warren H. Wilson


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