How do you use Vagaries in a sentence? See 10+ example sentences showing how this word appears in different contexts, plus the exact meaning.
Vagaries in a sentence
Vagaries meaning
plural of vagary
Using Vagaries
- The main meaning on this page is: plural of vagary
- In the example corpus, vagaries often appears in combinations such as: vagaries of, the vagaries, and vagaries.
Context around Vagaries
- Average sentence length in these examples: 25 words
- Position in the sentence: 3 start, 11 middle, 6 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Vagaries
- In this selection, "vagaries" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 25 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, usual and volatile stand out and add context to how "vagaries" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include to the vagaries of the and and the vagaries of human. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "vagaries" sits close to words such as abbe, abeyance and abp, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with vagaries
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
But the rest was, as usual, vagaries and dodges. (9 words)
But the vagaries of form haunted him and eventually, he fell out of the team. (15 words)
Developed countries have, for decades, used debt to protect their citizens from the vagaries of life. (16 words)
Regular readers of this column may be tired of one of my favourite quotes: “one day a rooster, the next a feather duster”, pronouncement on the vagaries of sporting fortune by Alan Jones, coach of the 1984 Grand Slam-winning Wallabies. (41 words)
Gold futures closed on the cusp of a seven-year high as the precious metal emerges as a safe haven for investors seeking to protect their portfolios from the vagaries of the coronavirus and the public-health response. (38 words)
These houses are built and then sold, and are subject to the vagaries of the market; it will be interesting to see how something that isn't the usual three bed/ two bath house will do. (36 words)
Example sentences (20)
Also, humans understand the vagaries of everyday life, and this hands-on experience creates possibilities for new products and services.
But when the quantity of a fiat currency and associated credit expands massively and given the vagaries of human evaluation, this cannot be true.
Given the challenges that farmers face in terms of spiralling cost of production and vagaries of nature, the need was felt for a digital solution,тАЭ he said.
He said the Congress had been reminding the government to make arrangements for procurement and save the farmers from nature’s vagaries but the government had just ignored the suggestions.
But the rest was, as usual, vagaries and dodges.
Given the vicissitudes of political appointments in Nigeria and the volatile vagaries of politics in Nigeria, people will come and go.
Also, because of the vagaries of our weather, you may still be able to get a crop of snap beans by planting soon.
Developed countries have, for decades, used debt to protect their citizens from the vagaries of life.
Gold futures closed on the cusp of a seven-year high as the precious metal emerges as a safe haven for investors seeking to protect their portfolios from the vagaries of the coronavirus and the public-health response.
He can’t wait on a virus whose vagaries no one can completely understand or control.
Neither national democracies nor the European bureaucracy have so far managed to shelter our societies from the vagaries of globally integrated capitalism.
But the vagaries of form haunted him and eventually, he fell out of the team.
Dams and levees are mature tech, but still subject to vagaries of social mechanisms (producing rare but costly failures).
For those unfamiliar with the term, it refers to a small state left economically and politically vulnerable to the vagaries of markets due to its reliance on a single export controlled by foreign owners.
Over the course of a full day’s congressional testimony, Michael Cohen touched on sweeping themes: American democracy, personal remorse, and the vagaries of human nature.
Regular readers of this column may be tired of one of my favourite quotes: “one day a rooster, the next a feather duster”, pronouncement on the vagaries of sporting fortune by Alan Jones, coach of the 1984 Grand Slam-winning Wallabies.
The core issue to address, after peeling through onion’s many layers, is not about absence of storage or processing infrastructure, but managing the vagaries of the weather.
These houses are built and then sold, and are subject to the vagaries of the market; it will be interesting to see how something that isn't the usual three bed/ two bath house will do.
The vineyard had been thought to be lost to the ravages and vagaries of centuries of urban development and war.
And the government has made clear that investors won't be able to take a majority stake, leaving them open to the vagaries of the state, while the banking sector remains firmly shut.
Common combinations with vagaries
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- vagaries of 26×
- the vagaries 21×
- and vagaries 2×