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  1. Dictionary
    fickleness
    /ˈfɪklnəs/

    noun

    • 1. changeability, especially as regards one's loyalties or affections: "the fickleness of youth"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Fickleness is the quality of being likely to change your opinion or your feelings suddenly and without a good reason. Learn more about this word, its synonyms, and how to use it in sentences with Cambridge Dictionary.

  3. Fickle means lacking firmness or steadiness, especially in purpose or devotion. It implies unreliability because of perverse changeability and incapacity for steadfastness. See synonyms, examples, etymology, and related words.

  4. Fickle means likely to change your opinion or your feelings suddenly and without a good reason. Learn how to use this adjective in different contexts, synonyms, antonyms, and translations.

  5. Fickleness is a trait of being likely to change, especially when it comes to loyalty or feelings. Your dog's fickleness might mean she loves you best today, but your brother will be her favorite tomorrow.

  6. fickleness is the fact of changing often and suddenly or of often changing your mind in an unreasonable way. See examples, pronunciation, synonyms and usage notes for this word.

  7. Fickle means changeable in affection, behavior, opinion, or loyalty, often due to perversity or whim. Learn the origin, history, and usage of fickle and its synonyms, such as inconstant, capricious, and vacillating.

  8. Fickleness is the quality or state of being changeable in purpose, affections, or other qualities; capriciousness. Learn the synonyms, pronunciation, and usage of fickleness with examples from Collins English Dictionary.