Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for arbitrariness. Search instead for Temporariness.
Synonyms

arbitrariness

American  
[ahr-bi-trer-ee-nis] / ˈɑr bɪˌtrɛr i nɪs /

noun

  1. the quality of being subject to an individual’s will, judgment, discretion, or personal preference.

    Of course none of this makes sense; it just shows the arbitrariness and subjectivity of what's considered obscene.

    Students need to recognize that there is a certain arbitrariness in any ranking, and be less concerned about whether a school has moved up or down slightly in any given year.

  2. the quality of having no apparent reason or pattern; randomness.

    These inconsistencies show the arbitrariness, incongruity, and unreliability of what gets remembered.

  3. the state or quality of being uncontrolled or unrestricted by law; tyranny.

    When red tape serves only the organization itself, the rule of law can easily turn into arbitrariness.

    The real burden on the peasants was the arbitrariness of the autocratic form of government.

  4. Linguistics, Semiotics. (of words or language) the quality of having no correspondence between the sounds or form of a word and the form, function, or meaning of the thing being denoted.

    The arbitrariness of words is absolute because words are abstractions.

  5. Mathematics. the quality of being undetermined, or not having been assigned a specific value.

    The arbitrariness of ε concludes the proof for that case.


Other Word Forms

  • nonarbitrariness noun

Etymology

Origin of arbitrariness

arbitrary ( def. ) + -ness ( def. )

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.

As a student at the University of Chicago, he became fascinated with the ways her work “gave you a view of the arbitrariness of cultural mores, cultural systems.”

From Slate • Feb. 10, 2024

For others, dog meat has served as a provocative thought exercise about the arbitrariness of the moral value humans assign to animals.

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 15, 2024

She particularly focuses on what she calls the "arbitrariness" and the damage it has caused.

From Salon • Aug. 13, 2023

Yet the arbitrariness of opportunity and vocation — who gets to make art? who has to dig ditches? — is clear and pointed.

From New York Times • May 21, 2023

Initially, one of the most puzzling features of animal domestication is the seeming arbitrariness with which some species have been domesticated while their close relatives have not.

From "Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies" by Jared M. Diamond