Chaotic in a sentence as an adjective

I think that's true because the world is chaotic and complicated and imperfect, and to influence it means to be touched by that too.

Don't breathlessly follow the initial reports; they're chaotic, reporters are incentivized to jump the gun.

The team was going through chaotic transitions at the time, so I was shuffled around many challenging projects, all with tight deadlines and technical brokenness up the yin-yang.

No, it's a chaotic system that is quasistable for an average of 11 years at a time before it flips to the opposite orientation with respect to the spin axis.

Attempting to exercise control over such a chaotic system with simplistic solutions like giant space mirrors strikes me as a very bad idea indeed.

The filesystem layout, unfortunately, has merely become more chaotic.

Police are pretty obviously not policing neighborhoods and aren't on the beat--they're chaotic actors who get involved and always always always make things worse.

Pseudo-random, I guess, but the output of a simulation of a chaotic system is highly compressible and thus not random in the information theoretic sense.

But faced with a choice between that and a chaotic American public school where the primary goal appears to be stopping the students from shooting each other, I'll take the spoon feeding and straw hats any day.

* There is increasing interest in massively parallel neural nets, genetic algorithms and other forms of "chaotic" or complexity theory computing.

Six to seven day workweeks, below average compensation, hyper-political management, management that is quick to fire, and a generally chaotic environment.

"the notion that the governments raisin-administrators ward off chaotic gyrations in prices far-fetched: walnut and citrus farmers, after all, have abandoned similar systems in recent years without any ill effects"This issue has been studied extensively - "agricultural central banks" are a bad way to deal with a perishable commodity because they shift demand volatility onto the government's balance sheet and so dull the incentive for supply to adjust, or find ways to become more versatile.

Chaotic definitions

adjective

lacking a visible order or organization

See also: helter-skelter

adjective

completely unordered and unpredictable and confusing

See also: disorderly

adjective

of or relating to a sensitive dependence on initial conditions