Caprice in a sentence as a noun

It's a **** of a tooling tolerance or it's a Jony Ive last-minute caprice?

That is clearly not the case with the US justice system, and as the article points out, inside the prison the rules are applied with astonishing caprice and unfairness.

Either you try to impose hard-to-adjudicate rules requiring "rational decisions" or you accept that a long-running game may be decided by caprice.

Or, we could do things that encourage this burning desire, perhaps?It certainly seems possible to teach in a way that kindles a life long love of programming, rather than leaving things to blind caprice - most groups just don't even seem to realise this might be a good idea.

In your first economics class a good teacher probably dismantled any idea in your head that value is objective -- it's based on fiat and caprice; "everything is worth what its purchaser will pay for it," and "banks in this sense really create money," and so on.

If it's just his personal caprice, then yeah it's dubious, but better an idiosyncratic dictator than no standards at all.> then come to work the next day to have found out that the manager re-wrote it claiming "simplification" of the code, which is in fact not trueThis is extremely common.

Caprice definitions

noun

a sudden desire; "he bought it on an impulse"

See also: impulse whim