fluky

[ UK /flˈʌki/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. subject to accident or chance or change
    getting that job was definitely fluky
    an iffy proposition
    a chancy appeal at best
    a fluky wind
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How To Use fluky In A Sentence

  • In a kind of literary sleuthing, Ms. Zanganeh haunts many of the places where Nabokov lived, visits his grave in Clarens, Switzerland, detects portents that link her with him, celebrating fluky coincidences between Nabokov and herself and correlations that conjoin them in some sort of "relationship," although she does point out that she was only 10 months old when he died on July 2, 1977. The Trouble With Ardor
  • Perfection made an encore appearance on the 16th at Augusta National three days later; not as a fluky hole-in-one, but in the form of a magnificent chipped-in birdie up the slope.
  • ‘It has happened too many times to be fluky,’ Burgess said.
  • This is fluky psychology, also be pure belong to accidental.
  • As for the common people their appraisals certainly are mistake-ridden and are not able to have the right direction in dealing with the fluky objection conditions.
  • A fluky opening score and a try right on the final hooter meant the scoreline flattered Batley in what was an evenly-contested match.
  • It was kind of a fluky goal, and I never thought it would end up going to me.
  • Erratic players are punished for their disasters in addition to being rewarded for their fluky strokes of fortune.
  • Even so, it's the fluky, once-in-a-lifetime accidents that keep us up at night, and it's the survivors' ingenuity - not their errors - that leaves the most lasting impression.
  • a fluky wind
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