That building is a little precarious to me!
He was in a precarious situation
There was this precarious ladder that had to be climbed. This is a sentence for the word precarious.
yes
Julie put herself in a precarious situation when she pointed the gun at the police.
Every episode of "The Perils of Pauline" placed Pauline in precarious positions.
He took great care as he gradually edged along the precarious narrow ledge on the thirty-second floor.
The precairous cat dug holes in my arm after he freaked out about the dogs fighting by : noha yahay. To me, the above seems a strange use for 'precarious'. Let's try: 'I was in a precarious position - the bridge had nearly collapsed under me.'
Here's a few..."The precarious looking bridge was usually avoided""If you can get two balls to balance on each other, your structure would probably be very precarious""That sculpture looks very precarious," the woman remarked.
'Most Precarious' by Blues Traveler has the word precarious in it.
Kristina, Madison, and Emma have a relationship with insects that is quite precarious.
pre⋅car⋅i⋅ous [pri-kair-ee-uhs] -adjective1.dependent on circumstances beyond one's control; uncertain; unstable; insecure e.g a precarious livelihood.2.dependent on the will or pleasure of another; liable to be withdrawn or lost at the will of another e.g He held a precarious tenure under an arbitrary administration.3.exposed to or involving danger; dangerous; perilous; risky e.g the precarious life of an underseas diver.4.having insufficient, little, or no foundation e.g a precarious assumption.
The root word for "precarious" is "precārius," which comes from Latin and means "obtained by begging or praying."