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precarious
[ pri-kair-ee-uhs ]
adjective
a precarious livelihood.
Synonyms: ,
Antonyms:
- dependent on the will or pleasure of another; liable to be withdrawn or lost at the will of another:
He held a precarious tenure under an arbitrary administration.
Synonyms: , , ,
Antonyms:
the precarious life of an underseas diver.
Synonyms:
Antonyms:
- having insufficient, little, or no foundation:
a precarious assumption.
Synonyms: , ,
Antonyms:
precarious
/ 辫谤瑟藞办蓻蓹谤瑟蓹蝉 /
adjective
- liable to failure or catastrophe; insecure; perilous
- archaic.dependent on another's will
Derived Forms
- 辫谤别藞肠补谤颈辞耻蝉苍别蝉蝉, noun
- 辫谤别藞肠补谤颈辞耻蝉濒测, adverb
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉路濒测 adverb
- 辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉路苍别蝉蝉 noun
- 蝉耻路辫别谤路辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉 adjective
- su路per路辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉路苍别蝉蝉 noun
- 耻苍路辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉 adjective
- un路辫谤别路肠补谤路颈路辞耻蝉路苍别蝉蝉 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of precarious1
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of precarious1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The house was simply gone, save the precarious, towering chimney and the massive concrete pillars that had supported the front porch.
But even without that devastating emergency, there are other signs that the city has entered a precarious period.
Pulling employees from crucial offices when the agency is already at a 50-year-low in staff puts benefits in a precarious place, he told Salon.
Trump鈥檚 erratic trade policies and threats to withhold federal funds from California, from public health funding to support for schools, have made predicting revenues even more precarious than usual.
Chad Lawton, sitting in his office at the local union, takes a deep breath as he contemplates how precarious his life feels.
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