How to Use arbitrary in a Sentence

arbitrary

adjective
  • An arbitrary number has been assigned to each district.
  • Although arbitrary arrests are illegal, they continue to occur in many parts of the country.
  • I don't know why I chose that one; it was a completely arbitrary decision.
  • Because the shooting was arbitrary and up and down the street.
    Meredith Deliso, ABC News, 16 May 2023
  • But the way in which many of them use these numbers is arbitrary.
    Kaitlyn Tiffany, The Atlantic, 17 Jan. 2023
  • And that arbitrary bit of division isn’t the end of it.
    Andrew Van Dam, Washington Post, 11 Aug. 2023
  • The title, like so much else in the book, seems arbitrary.
    Paul Elie, The New Yorker, 19 Aug. 2019
  • Of course, your choice doesn’t have to be so arbitrary.
    Alisha McDarris, Popular Science, 13 Jan. 2020
  • And that method is both somewhat arbitrary and hard to scale up.
    Jeremy Kahn, Fortune, 8 Feb. 2022
  • The record, whether carved in stone or bits of data, is arbitrary in the extreme.
    Virginia Heffernan, WIRED, 20 Aug. 2019
  • The judge is abusing the arbitrary and capricious standard.
    Noah Feldman Bloomberg Opinion (tns), Star Tribune, 28 Jan. 2021
  • The athletes call that arbitrary punishment for having dared to walk away from the team.
    Vivienne Walt, Time, 8 July 2021
  • Sickness is arbitrary and can befall any one of us at any time.
    Alaska Dispatch News, 2 Aug. 2017
  • That death can be arbitrary is part of the human condition.
    The Economist, 14 Dec. 2017
  • To critics, the list is arbitrary, vague and amounts to picking winners and losers.
    Tory Newmyer, Washington Post, 9 Mar. 2018
  • But this is a highly arbitrary process, and marginalized people can slip through the cracks.
    Alvin Chang, Vox, 26 July 2018
  • The metrics of perfection are arbitrary and imposed in the service of those who fit them.
    Benjamin Vanhoose, PEOPLE.com, 7 July 2021
  • That was the way to get through grief: make each moment hard with arbitrary want, then hop on them like rocks to get across the day.
    Kate Osana Simonian, chicagotribune.com, 10 June 2017
  • But limits like these seem arbitrary and open to gaming.
    Marguerite Roza, Forbes, 17 Mar. 2021
  • My son has a set biorhythm, and no arbitrary daylight saving law is going to shift it.
    Rachel Meyer, chicagotribune.com, 22 Nov. 2019
  • The heavy-handed and arbitrary way in which it was done in Shanghai backfired.
    Robert Mahoney, CNN, 26 Apr. 2022
  • Both were arbitrary categories and different means to the same end.
    Peter Richardson, The New Republic, 28 Jan. 2022
  • But to travelers, the rules can seem arbitrary and unfair.
    Washington Post, 31 Mar. 2021
  • The Founders did not mean for government to be fickle or arbitrary.
    Matthew Continetti, National Review, 10 June 2023
  • Australia is the almost arbitrary place where this savant of letters was born.
    Ryu Spaeth, The New Republic, 4 May 2018
  • They are created out of peer pressure based on an arbitrary date.
    Ashley Stahl, Forbes, 9 Dec. 2021
  • Key factors like what tree to plant, when to plant it, and where are not arbitrary decisions.
    Dan Lambe, Treehugger, 13 Apr. 2023
  • Is picking someone based on a star sign any more arbitrary than picking them based on a few photos?
    Alexandra Jones, refinery29.com, 27 Jan. 2020
  • Acreage targets are not arbitrary but are based on historic burn intervals recorded in the growth ring of old trees.
    Arkansas Online, 26 Nov. 2021
  • The world is strange and wonderful; good, bad, and sometimes arbitrary.
    National Geographic, 14 Aug. 2016

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'arbitrary.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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