improbably in English

adverb

in an unlikely manne

Use "improbably" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "improbably" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "improbably", or refer to the context using the word "improbably" in the English Dictionary.

1. Not improbably we'll win.

2. The sea is an improbably pale turquoise.

3. He claimed, improbably, that he had never been there.

4. But his pantaloons and enormous royal feet have survived, improbably, down the centuries.

5. The nest egg grew and grew; improbably, unbelievably, it grew.

6. But suddenly, improbably, one day the long - steed surged into action.

7. "Improbably charmingwill have you Chortling and reading lines aloud." —PEOPLE

8. Watts's journey into trend research began, improbably , with the snowy tree cricket.

9. Not improbably he had never before viewed himself as he did now. Sentencedict.com

10. Brilliantly Aphorizing eyestrain sprauchling tabulate killingly, short-winded fribbling Norbert ladders improbably myalgic isle

11. Antonyms for Avowedly include actually, certainly, really, surely, truly, absolutely, improbably, undoubtedly, unlikely and in fact

12. She gazed at this improbably overgrown figure out of an inconceivable future and promptly dismissed it.

13. Cramped wooden benches, a friendly welcome for regulars and improbably large plates of home-made pies, omelettes, grills and chips.

14. He also shows an improbably large number of pollution readings just inside the threshold for what Beijing calls a "blue-sky day".

15. Becquerels is precise in delivery, which is complicated by the slow nature of the guitar playing, with chords extended for improbably lengthy periods, as a delightful…

16. From that highly improbably account of a gentle rabbi - friend of little children, Roman tax collectors, and ladies with gynecological problems - could be distilled, by skilled interpreters well versed in the art of rabbinic exegesis as well as the abracadabra of Gnostic mysticism, secret passwords and sayings.

17. And two enormous Scottish poems, the Buik of Alexander, which has been improbably Ascribed to Barbour, and Sir Gilbert Hay's Buik of Alexander the Conquerour; one nearly complete Prose Life of Alexander and fragments of four others; a stanzaic translation of the Fuerres de Gadres which survives only in a fragment, the Romance of Cassamus, and three