Encara no tenim significats per a "capricious nature".
1The first was the totally capricious nature of the senior officers' leadership.
2The capricious nature of Mongolia's democratic government have complicated foreign investment projects in the country.
3Beebe told reporters of the capricious nature of tornadoes.
4It underlines the capricious nature of sport.
5The horror of the times hath touched her, too, I think, and rendered more serious that capricious nature.
6He had analyzed Madame de Bergenheim's character well enough to perceive the least variation in her capricious nature.
7You know the Emperor's wayward, capricious nature, his eagerness for fame and military glory, his morbid terror of the unknown.
8His long resistance to her influence, followed by this partial yielding to it, had begun to irritate her capricious nature intensely.
9It is a Jekyll and Hyde moment that portrays the capricious nature of football supporters and elements of Italian life in general.
10And this is where the capricious nature of the all-powerful donor base sheds some queasy light on the current malaise of the left.
11I pondered that a few moments, then decided it was one more sign of the Kindly Ones' capricious nature, and laid into the breakfast.
12One might imagine it animated by those sportive and capricious nature-spirits an old Father of the church used to call the monkeys of God.
13Yes, the "climate" of Berlin should be more salubrious to the body, if not to the mind, than the fickle environment of capricious nature.
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