The AI-powered English dictionary
comparative more erratic, superlative most erratic
Unsteady, random; prone to unexpected changes; not consistent. examples
Deviating from normal opinions or actions; eccentric; odd. examples
plural erratics
(geology) A rock moved from one location to another, usually by a glacier. quotations
The term for a displaced boulder is an erratic, but in the nineteenth century the expression seemed to apply more often to the theories than to the rocks.
2003, Bill Bryson, A Short History of Nearly Everything, BCA, page 372
During the last ice-age, massive stones were carried for miles by the scouring glaciers, only to be left, like passengers at the end of the line, when the glaciers retreated. Stranded in their new surroundings with rocks with which they share no common geology, their out-of-place-ness is evoked by their name: “erratics”.
2015 May 4, Dominick Tyler, “10 UK landscape features that you’ve probably never heard of”, in The Guardian
Anything that has erratic characteristics. examples