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vagarious

[vuh-gair-ee-uhs] / vəˈgɛər i əs /






Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

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It is a troubling state of affairs indeed if the vagarious interests of one federal prosecutor, acting outside of public view, can determine so much about an individual’s future.

From Salon Jan. 16, 2013

Bozzy's vagarious search for a wife, described in the previous volume, has succeeded, and for the moment at least he is well-behaved.

From Time Magazine Archive

She had a slow, vagarious notion that all of the cots were tilted, so that they appeared each on a cross, these mothers.

From Star-Dust by Hurst, Fannie

Not a memory had traversed the ground since to blur a detail, though now the adult faculties could apprehend distortion, the beautiful vagarious distortion that can live in a brain over toddling feet.

From The Unknown Sea by Housman, Clemence

There are certain stars that have such irregular, uncertain, vagarious ways that they were called vagabonds, or planets, by the early astronomers.

From Recreations in Astronomy With Directions for Practical Experiments and Telescopic Work by Warren, Henry White




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