Foible in a sentence as a noun

Just pointing out a foible of the code’s author.

Other than the minor branding foible, though, this looks great.

I know that it's a foible of mine!PS I hope this post itself isn't "redundant".

Another slight foible - how often does someone buy a dresser?

On the other hand, putting forth your own foible is not overly persuasive.

This is a rare example of peer-to-peer advice where he understood his own foible.

I use TLS and SSL interchangeably, which is a foible I should work on correcting, but the difference doesn't matter much here.

In my experience the foible of learning is distraction, so staying accountable to Trello keeps you on track.

It’s a personal foible and it can be very unattractive, but I’m always concerned that everyone know how smart I am.

> while they shun modern techThis is a common foible of "educated public," and a lot of people misunderstand the Amish: they don't shun modern tech.

The problem I have with that line of thinking is it encourages halting the progress of technology based on fear of the unknown, a classic human foible.

Looks quite decent to me. They professionally didn't overdecorate it, which is a common amateur foible.

Misusing statistics and measurements is obviously an epidemic confined solely to the UX sphere, and not a basic human foible.

Writing off people for any foible or plain appearance is just a habit from ignoring anything remotely unstimulating on the internet.

IOS is not perfect, far from it, but the breathless way the tech press at large has covered every foible with the iPhone has made me immediately question articles like this from the set out, and sure enough, sensationalized.

Executive malfeasance gets endlessly excused away as the product of poor incentives, because in your quest to humanize executives, you succumb to the perfectly natural human foible of "to know all is to forgive all".Now, I'm not saying you're a mustache-twirling villain.

Foible definitions

noun

a behavioral attribute that is distinctive and peculiar to an individual

See also: idiosyncrasy mannerism

noun

the weaker part of a sword's blade from the forte to the tip