What is another word for caprices?

Pronunciation: [kɐpɹˈiːsɪz] (IPA)

Caprices are sudden or unpredictable changes that can affect someone's behavior or mood. Among the synonyms that can be used in place of caprices are whims, fancies, impulses, and whimsies. Whims are fleeting desires that can be unpredictable and can change with little or no warning. Fancies refer to unrealistic or extravagant ideas or notions. Impulses are sudden urges or inclinations that can come without any prior thought or consideration. Whimsies are unrealistic ideas or desires that are not practical or reasonable. All these synonyms are similar to caprices in the sense that they describe sudden or unpredictable changes or desires.

Usage examples for Caprices

He only knew that his will was somehow sick; that it spent itself in caprices, and brought him no happiness from the fulfilment of the most vehement wish.
"A Hazard of New Fortunes, Part Fifth"
William Dean Howells
With all its caprices, however, I like the month of April.
"Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists"
Washington Irving
Certainly, of all the caprices of this huge cold sea, its calms are the shortest lived, but this knowledge helped me to no other.
"The Frozen Pirate"
W. Clark Russell

Famous quotes with Caprices

  • Never lose sight of the fact that all human felicity lies in man's imagination, and that he cannot think to attain it unless he heeds all his caprices. The most fortunate of persons is he who has the most means to satisfy his vagaries.
    Marquis de Sade
  • She had caprices of a marvellous unexpectedness, and how is any one to imitate a caprice?
    Stendhal
  • I had learned to have a perfect nausea for the theatre: the continual repetition of the same words and the same gestures, night after night, and the caprices, the way of looking at life, and the entire rigmarole disgusted me.
    Isadora Duncan
  • My own pseudo-conclusion: That we've been damned by giants sound asleep, or by great scientific principles and abstractions that cannot realize themselves: that little harlots have visited their caprices upon us; that clowns, with buckets of water from which they pretend to cast thousands of good-sized fishes have anathematized us for laughing disrespectfully, because, as with all clowns, underlying buffoonery is the desire to be taken seriously; that pale ignorances, presiding over microscopes by which they cannot distinguish flesh from nostoc or fishes' spawn, have visited upon us their wan solemnities. We've been damned by corpses and skeletons and mummies, which twitch and totter with pseudo-life derived from conveniences.
    Charles Fort
  • Affections are more solid and lasting among spirits than among men, because they are not subordinated to the caprices of material interests and self-love.
    Allan Kardec

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