Poussin's view of the genre, as a representation modelled on true nature, echoes the meaning of the caprice in at least one form of literature. |
The insistence of the Member States to insert minimum clauses into Commission proposals, was not an idle caprice. |
The didacticism of this passage demonstrates that the caprice of nature expresses the narrator's perspective and not the other way around. |
Her narrative follows a loopy line traced more by mood and caprice than by causation or chronology. |
If cricket is a game of glorious uncertainties, then its one-day version is sheer caprice. |
In a variety of languages, either for the sake of euphony, or from caprice or accident, sibilant letters have been interchanged with dentals. |