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32 Sentences With "as likely as not"

How to use as likely as not in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "as likely as not" and check conjugation/comparative form for "as likely as not". Mastering all the usages of "as likely as not" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I think a big 20193 result is about as likely as not.
Voters today are as likely as not to approve a state tax increase.
Both teams are imperfect enough that they're as likely as not to finish below .
But since 1980, children are as likely as not to earn less than their parents did.
Kuenssberg cited unidentified sources as saying that a deal was as likely as not tomorrow as today.
And as the stocks merry-go-round continues, spreads are as likely as not going to be remain volatile.
For the first time, it's as likely as not that American children will be less prosperous than their parents.
Boxes full of food, clothes, or other stuff will clog up supply lines and as likely as not go unused.
A child under ten who has a Caribbean parent is more than twice as likely as not to have a white parent.
He is as likely as not to pass unnoticed, even here in his hometown, where his novels are prominently on display in bookstores.
It is as likely as not that Republicans will have the same amount of wiggle room — or more — in the Senate in 2019.
Although for now the Sinclair-Tribune merger is only temporarily halted, the end result is as likely as not that it will be withdrawn.
If my father said he was going to come and take me out, it was as likely as not that he wouldn't show up.
Dropped down at random in history, we are all as likely as not to be members of the Soprano crew, waiting outside Satriale's Pork Store.
It shows in his mechanics, which haven't changed much from when he was as likely as not to take a no-hitter into the seventh inning.
As likely as not, their winning will be at least partially the result of Irving siphoning off too much of the Cleveland offense in his own direction.
So, for example, if one of their 62 email systems has been compromised, the agency as likely as not has no good way to notify everyone about it.
This petition was denied, primarily because the Open Internet Order was by that point in peril of replacement, and new deliberations would as likely as not soon be rendered moot.
"Wherever the flag with a red cross on a white background flutters on St George's Day, there as likely as not a vote for Brexit will follow on referendum day," he wrote.
Similarly, while government-approved "vitally necessary" drugs are theoretically covered, in practice they are as likely as not to be out of stock at the state-run pharmacies that distribute them free.
Corrections are often defined as market drop of 10 percent or more, and Chad Morganlander of Stifel Nicolaus thinks that even with less than 3 ½ months left in 2016, such an event is as likely as not.
In that first five years or six years of the epidemic, it was as likely as not that if you came down with AIDS, your parents would disown you, your church would disown you, you would lose your job.
Then, an expedition in search of new species that might make useful crops or militarily important medicines was as likely as not to go off on board one of His Majesty's warships, in case of interference by the French.
The factors driving most parents, researchers say, are widening inequality, the growing importance of a college degree, and the fact that for the first time, children of this generation are as likely as not to be less prosperous than their parents.
The wealth that counted was measured in hectares, exclusivity was what you conferred on the friends (and, more important, the enemies) you fed at your domain, and, as likely as not, your menus were based on Cardinal Richelieu's famous dinner parties—fancy and, obviously, French.
We think of the criminal era as a time when getting an abortion meant a furtive trip into the back alley, where, as likely as not, an unskilled person — maybe a drugstore owner or beautician or medical quack — would sexually assault, maim, or even negligently kill a desperate woman.
The adult birds, a couple, watch me every day as I take my morning walk, as likely as not to be holding a book as I stroll, and I watch them every day from my window as they take their afternoon flights, soaring and gliding in the thermals, wingtip feathers splayed, swooping down to catch a rodent or a discarded bit of sandwich or a plastic T-Rex.
5, sec. A, no. 1, subchap. j., Reasonable Doubt Rule, ("The reasonable doubt rule means that the evidence provided by the claimant/beneficiary [or obtained on his/her behalf] must only persuade the decision maker that each factual matter is at least as likely as not....").
In a conflict, he continues, "the presence of an audience generally makes it more likely that the protagonists will want to be seen to win, and that they will be less prepared to resolve than to fight'. Schattschneider goes as far as to argue that spectators are 'an integral part of the situation for, as likely as not, the audience determines the outcome of the fight'(1960, p.2)."quoted in Lynch, J. & Galtung, J. (2010).
The 1991 Final Report of the Nuclear Shipyard Worker Study (NSWS) analyzed the effects of radiation exposure in the U.S. to three cohort groups: 27,872 high-dose nuclear workers, 10348 low-dose nuclear workers, and a control group of 32,510 shipyard workers not exposed to radiation. Dose reconstruction for occupational radiation exposure used by the U.S. Department of Labor assumes that the probability of cancer is "at least as likely as not" rendering it complex for workers to claim compensation via The Act.
This is a simple and unrhetorical > answer to your question. A man is not bothered by the reality to which he is > accustomed, that is to say, in the midst of which he has been born. He may > be very much disturbed by reality elsewhere, but even as to that it would be > only a question of time. You are just as likely as not when you return to > Vienna to be horrified by what you may consider to be extraordinary change > or series of changes.
Keynes, in chapter 3 of the TP, used the example of taking an umbrella in case of rain to express the idea of uncertainty that he dealt with by the use of interval estimates in chapters 3, 15, 16, and 17 of the TP. Intervals that overlap are not greater than, less than or equal to each other. They can't be compared. > Is our expectation of rain, when we start out for a walk, always more likely > than not, or less likely than not, or as likely as not? I am prepared to > argue that on some occasions none of these alternatives hold, and that it > will be an arbitrary matter to decide for or against the umbrella.

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