First Known Use: 15th century
Dictionary
arbitrary
adjective ar·bi·trary \ˈär-bə-ˌtrer-ē, -ˌtre-rē\
: not planned or chosen for a particular reason : not based on reason or evidence
: done without concern for what is fair or right
Full Definition of ARBITRARY
1
: depending on individual discretion (as of a judge) and not fixed by law <the manner of punishment is arbitrary>
2
a : not restrained or limited in the exercise of power : ruling by absolute authority <an arbitrary government> b : marked by or resulting from the unrestrained and often tyrannical exercise of power <protection from arbitrary arrest and detention>
3
a : based on or determined by individual preference or convenience rather than by necessity or the intrinsic nature of something <an arbitrary standard> <take any arbitrary positive number> <arbitrary division of historical studies into watertight compartments — A. J. Toynbee> b : existing or coming about seemingly at random or by chance or as a capricious and unreasonable act of will <when a task is not seen in a meaningful context it is experienced as being arbitrary — Nehemiah Jordan>
— ar·bi·trari·ly \ˌär-bə-ˈtrer-ə-lē, -ˈtre-rə-\ adverb
— ar·bi·trar·i·ness \ˈär-bə-ˌtrer-ē-nəs, -ˌtre-rē-\ noun
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Examples of ARBITRARY
- U.S. News was revealed to have considered assigning in its next rankings an arbitrary SAT score to Sarah Lawrence College because the school no longer collects applicants' scores. —Julie Rawe, Time, 2 Apr. 2007
- Darwin's emphasis on how populations gradually change gave the notion of species a more arbitrary quality: Species had whatever boundaries taxonomists chose. The idea of a species as a population of individuals that breed mostly with each other comes from 20th-century theorists. —S. Milius, Science News, 25 Mar. 2006
- The Marriage Act certainly employed arbitrary and draconian means. It forced all couples to marry between 8 am and 12 noon, according to the rites of the established Church of England, in one of their respective local parish churches. —David Johnson, History Today, November 2003
- Two days after President Lincoln issued the first version of his Emancipation Proclamation, he suspended the right of habeas corpus for anyone accused of resisting the draft or discouraging enlistment. Hundreds of civilians were arrested, some for good reasons, some for entirely arbitrary and personal ones. —Michael Lesy, Double Take, Spring 2001
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Origin of ARBITRARY
(see 1arbitrage)
Related to ARBITRARY
- Synonyms
- dictatorial, high-handed, imperious, peremptory, willful (or wilful)
- Antonyms
- methodical (also methodic), nonrandom, orderly, organized, regular, systematic, systematized
Other Government and Politics Terms
ARBITRARY Defined for Kids
arbitrary
adjective ar·bi·trary \ˈär-bə-ˌtrer-ē\
Definition of ARBITRARY for Kids
1
: made, chosen, or acting without thought of what is fair or right <arbitrary decisions> <an arbitrary ruler>
2
: seeming to have been made or chosen by chance <We were given an arbitrary list of books to choose from.>
— ar·bi·trari·ly \ˌär-bə-ˈtrer-ə-lē\ adverb
— ar·bi·trar·i·ness \ˈär-bə-ˌtrer-ē-nəs\ noun
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