These are qualities that foreigners admire, accustomed as they more usually are to the caprices of their own leaders. |
Every state and government in the world is now vulnerable to the caprices and blackmails of financial markets. |
His nephew, Prince Demitri Ghyka, had been a wild pleasure seeker, whose caprices and excesses had delighted and pleased her.
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Even those who need emergency hospital care will be subjected to the caprices and bureaucratic diktat of the soldiers guarding the gates. |
But now, with Morgan's depiction of her caprices and attempts to outwit him, she suddenly sounds quite normal. |
He was also able to draw on first-hand knowledge of the caprices of the writing life. |