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103 Sentences With "for all I know"

How to use for all I know in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "for all I know" and check conjugation/comparative form for "for all I know". Mastering all the usages of "for all I know" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Shit, it could be a smell for all I know.
For all I know, they might only be $10 ideas.
She might be doing jumping jacks for all I know.
For all I know, you're the champ of black hole trivia.
It at least seems that way but for all I know.
Maybe bouncing it off the ozone layer, for all I know.
For all I know they are a bunch of weenie liberals.
It could be a centaur next to me for all I know.
For all I know, I'm having fingers stuck up in my face.
However, that could lead to my eventual downfall, for all I know.
""For all I know, he might get drafted right out of high school!
Hell, for all I know, they would even be capable of killing me.
It may, for all I know, never be accepted by all EU members.
For all I know, many Pixel 2 owners have never even heard music.
It could be Ted Glen's van from Postman Pat for all I know.
And for all I know, the network really did have those packages ready.
And for all I know, you'll give me a drug and I'll just dream!
For all I know, Mark and Marty could be talking MAD shit behind closed doors.
Then again, for all I know he could be working in the Twins' front office.
For all I know they're paying United a bunch of money to come down here.
For all I know, the people responsible for these advertisements have circumnavigated the globe with billboards.
I can't complain too much about that; for all I know, Google brought you to this review.
For all I know, this could be exactly how it is at Toyota or Ford or something else.
For all I know, I may open five more restaurants and two of those are going to fail.
I mean, for all I know, he could have been upstairs the whole time that we were talking.
They're legal agreements, and for all I know the other side wouldn't want to get out of it.
They're legal agreements, and for all I know, the other side wouldn't want to get out of it.
"All the people before me dropped their crap, so I could've come first for all I know," Ben says.
For all I know, the long distance is making it hard for him to deal with insecurity and jealousy.
But I've never said to him, 'You seem sad or darker now,' because, for all I know, that's growth.
For all I know he's a mensch and a half, but I would hesitate to call him a playwright.
For all I know, the man sits at home thrashing "Malibu" out on an old Spanish guitar every night.
Second Nature operates at the southern tip of the Appalachians, and for all I know I am headed further in.
Hell, for all I know Yeezy might be to clinical depression what Rick Ross is to being a drug lord.
Of course, they could have rugs for all I know, but my point is that we're talking about television coverage.
"They&aposre legal agreements, and for all I know the other side wouldn&apost want to get out of it."
For all I know you might want a simple, placid, pastoral existence on a South Seas island among idealized natives.
For all I know it suffers from flaws that he would have looked for and found had it undermined his views.
For all I know, those government workers who are doing such things are doing everything possible to act justly and humanely.
Of course, I've never seen Women of Influence, so for all I know it might be about the dangers of women having influence.
Among the hip and the young, beer might not even be drunk anymore; for all I know, they download it onto their phones.
"At this point for all I know she still works at Alaska in the same position, and that alone is worrying," he said.
But for all I know, Google makes a butt ton of money by selling $35 Chromecasts that aren't as useful as they could be.
The brand's website uses phrases like "lightweight pigment suspension system" and "very low in viscosity," so maybe it's black magic, for all I know.
For all I know he has the pure heart of a golden retriever and the sharp judicial mind of Owl from Winnie the Pooh.
People run to raise money for different causes, and for all I know this man was a warrior for testicular health or testicular awareness.
I saw a correction officer today, and he just finished coughing in front of me, and for all I know I have it already.
For all I know, he's going to come and start a fire in my garage beneath where I sleep in the middle of the night.
Now, I'm being quite conservative because I don't have much data to go on, but for all I know, your relationship could be overtly abusive.
For all I know, as I write these words, Nathan Lane is lying dead on a chaise longue on the stage of the Westside Theater.
I'm probably missing some stuff, and for all I know some new big lie will have been tweeted out by the time this is posted.
And heck, for all I know, maybe the real Marie (credited as a producer here, also under the pseudonym Marie) gave producers this extra detail.
For all I know, twenty stunt skiers could have died in the making of Eddie The Eagle, and they've just managed the public relations very well.
For all I know the first yakitori chefs in Japan had nothing but efficiency in mind when they speared each anatomical bit on its own skewer.
The Pie Tops are part of an ad campaign starring retired basketball player Grant Hill, who, for all I know, eats a ton of Pizza Hut pizza.
Do I try to get a 170-pound man stoned on morphine into a cab in which, for all I know, one bump could make his appendix explode?
It has pointed its sharp-nosed prow toward Eighth Avenue since 2011, when it floated in from the nearby Hudson or, for all I know, down from space.
For all I know, if Voltaire or Leibniz or Kant stepped out of a time machine and commented on today's political controversies, we'd think they were out to lunch.
" Perkins also told investigators while he was trying to figure out where Octavia's children were, she allegedly told him, "For all I know they can be in the closet.
For all I know, you have deep fears related to trust and, like many of us, are good at finding or creating situations in which those fears come true.
I know I also have my tiger days and my helicopter days, and for all I know, my free-range moments and my snowplow episodes, maybe in rapid succession.
For all I know, and I'm just making this up, the F.B.I. had already sent a memo over saying, we believe there ought to be a special counsel appointed.
For all I know, the person who has given me the most strength and hope over the years believes in the things I find most abhorrent in today's world.
For all I know everything Ballengee's suit alleges is true and Nate Diaz tossed his managers aside without paying them for what proved to be the paydays of a lifetime.
He pays for the stand operating fees in cash—and for all I know, maybe he's trying to pull a fast one on us, because his dues are sometimes short.
The most memorable was this biker—probably from a Russian motorcycle gang, for all I know—who was at the bar, ordering shot after shot of Patrón for everybody in the bar.
Now, there might have been four of them, for all I know, I can't even, at this point, remember, because there was a possibility that there would be five at the next meeting.
"For all I know, they're still counting ballots for Al Gore back there!" said Representative Matt Gaetz, a Republican from the Florida Panhandle who traveled south to raise alarms over the vote count.
Sure. Diagnoses are changing all the time, and for all I know the next version of the DSM might change so that I get knocked out of that diagnosis and I no longer qualify.
For all I know there are so many people who were in my position and the vote could've gone a totally different way if a lot of us had been able to cast a ballot.
The deepfakes of Johnson and Corbyn look pretty realistic, and for an ignorant American who has spent almost no time listening to or watching either of these politicians, they could be them, for all I know.
The motionless performer appears to be taking a break (they could be asleep, for all I know) but occasionally motions to a fascinated child and, after the photo-op, watches the parent drop money into an open purse.
France, though... People are going to talk about how England is going to qualify in its group, but let's be honest... the country consistently underperforms at World Cups, and even lowly Tunisia could upset them for all I know.
He may be a wonderful man for all I know, but all I do know is he was running the show and he gave the jingle over, for some reason or another, to my competitor and I never found out why.
True, he was handsome, and for all I know his body fit the Adonis Golden Ratio model to a T. But it's also blindingly clear from his self-worshiping monologue that he was a narcissist and, given what later occurred, a sociopath.
For all I know that may be the case with "Queen of Katwe," but if there is anyone out there capable of remaining unmoved by this true-life triumph-of-the-underdog sports story, I don't think I want to meet that person.
My son would have been wearing a Red Sox shirt — he was following the game 3,000 miles away, in California, and for all I know, he was wearing a Red Sox shirt, and it may even have been a particular lucky shirt.
" In The New York Times Book Review in 2009 Bruce Handy said of her work: "For all I know, she may suffer torment upon torment in front of a blank screen, but the results read as if they were a pleasure to write.
Since stock compilation producers are frustratingly hard to track down beyond the appearance of the compilations themselves in online music stores and streaming services, I have many unanswered questions about this album, and for all I know this music was recorded by algorithm.
"Salvatore," who could be based on her real-life Italian boyfriend for all I know, is auto-crooned so close to the edge of parody I wish she'd figured out how to sneak in the moon hitting her eye like a big pizza pie.
I had no interest in shopping for furnishings and decorations for our then-new house, so I spent all my time near the checkout lines, where they used to have (and may still have, for all I know) numerous toys and games on display.
I don't want to intrude on her privacy (for all I know, this woman may have some other underlying medical condition and already be receiving medical care for it), but at the same time, it's difficult for me to see someone looking so painfully thin.
Perhaps he is signalling that the ritual sacrifice can begin or to start the sharpening of knives, because for all I know I could be being walked out into a trap by some bloke I met only five minutes ago who seems to know these woods a little too well.
On the Runway 6 Photos View Slide Show ' There should be a word — maybe there is in German, for all I know — for the particular discomfort of sitting beside several hundred of your industry colleagues on a Sunday afternoon, listening as one to the huffing-and-puffing, gurgling soundtrack reminiscent of hard-core pornography.
I (that is to say, my character) walked past the Theatre of Dionysus in its construction, which I have visited in person (now ruined and restored, of course), and on up to the Acropolis, where I scaled the Parthenon and looked out over the tiled roofs under one of which, for all I know, I may find Plato sitting and writing The Symposium. Seriously. Seriously.
I say "recent" in order to give a sense of immediacy and energy to the preceding sentence, but the truth is that I am finishing this article four months after the sleepless night in question, and the letter asking me to write it, from George Miller of the University of Delaware, arrived almost two years ago, so for all I know Mr. Miller has managed to assemble his textbook on revision without me.
Some Fascists were > vegetarians; some liberals are vegetarians; ergo [...] [s]ome Fascists were > gay; some liberals are gay [...]. Fascists cared about educating children; > Hillary Clinton cares about educating children. Aha! [...] Like Coulter, > he's got a bunch of footnotes. And for all I know, they check out.
"Wodehouse (2008) [1949], The Mating Season, chapter 25, p. 245. On one occasion, Bertie considers it probable that even the distinguished Sir Roderick Glossop has consulted Jeeves, and says, "Jeeves is like Sherlock Holmes. The highest in the land come to him with their problems. For all I know, they may give him jewelled snuff boxes.
Highbury bore me. Richmond and Kew Undid me. ::The Waste Land, 1922 (T. S. Eliot, 1888–1965) Lady Croom: My hyacinth dell is become a haunt for hobgoblins, my Chinese bridge, which I am assured is superior to the one at Kew, and for all I know at Peking, is usurped by a fallen obelisk overgrown with briars.
In February 2009, Lazović trained with the first-team of Tottenham Hotspur F.C. for a couple of days, and by February 10th, Borac coach Ljubiša Dmitrović, told the press "For all I know, Lazović has been transferred to Tottenham". B92 Sport – Fudbal – I Totenhem želi Lazovića? 10 February 2009 However, a contract was never signed, and domestic club Red Star Belgrade took the initiative.
Williams officially joined the New York Police Department on August 23, 1866. According to popular lore, Williams originally approached NYPD Police Commissioner John Bergen at the Metropolitan Police Headquarters to personally request a commission as a patrolman. Bergen however, without any way to confirm his identity, pointed this fact out remarking that "You may be a convict from Sing Sing for all I know". Williams angrily told the commissioner he could keep the job and stormed out of his office.
Australian Flag Association website. Richard Whistler died in 1887 and a bailiff named Charles Dorrington, who later became Annie's husband, came to manage the farm. When the Whistler sisters asked their mother the name of their prospective bailiff, she replied, "It could be Ahasuerus for all I know!" As a result, Charles Dorrington was known by the nickname 'Asu' from then on, and Annie would use 'Ahasuerus' as a pseudonym when she later entered Australia's national flag competition (see below).
At one point Snoopy attempts to identify what type of bird Woodstock is with the aid of a field guide, asking Woodstock to attempt to imitate various birds: hawked crow, Bittering bittern, Warring wren, rufous-sided roufax, looney cuckoo bird, Ducky goose, warble warble and morning warbler. Snoopy finally gives up trying to figure it out, and says, "For all I know, you're a duck!" Woodstock then cries and Snoopy hugs him and apologizes. Despite being a bird, Woodstock is a very poor flyer.
'" Her mother worked as a seamstress, and she has said that her father was a German immigrant with whom she did not share a close relationship. While not musicians, her family enjoyed various genres of music. When Autumn was four years old, Autumn started learning the violin, and later commented: "I remember asking for a violin, but I don't remember knowing what one was. I might have thought it was a kind of pony for all I know, but I don't remember being disappointed.
The Los Angeles Times said the Pet Shop Boys "don't deserve the cruel fate they receive here. They are purveyors of pleasant and popular bubble-gum rock who have been caught up in what is essentially a string of MTV-type numbers overlaid with a pseudo-surreal style and snatches of confounding philosophical discourse that might have something to do with Einstein's theory of relativity (for all I know)."Movie Reviews British Popsters in `It Couldn't Happen Here' Thomas, Kevin. Los Angeles Times 20 May 1988: 5.
Near Redhill Briggs found a break in the clouds, and wriggled across the Hog's Back into Kenley. On arrival he was asked if he had flown through the railway tunnel that runs through the Hog's Back. Briggs wrote that "I may have for all I know, because I was practically flying blind half-in and half-out of the clouds with the undercarriage wheels scraping the trees and house tops". Briggs was looking forward to partying in London when an orderly informed him that Colonel Primrose wished to see him.
Map in the U.S. Navy All Hands magazine Johnson commented privately: "For all I know, our navy was shooting at whales out there."Congress Approves Gulf of Tonkin Resolution; August 7, 1964; Politico.com; July 2018 In 1967, former naval officer, John White, wrote a letter to the editor of the New Haven (CT) Register. He asserted "I maintain that President Johnson, Secretary McNamara and the Joint Chiefs of Staff gave false information to Congress in their report about US destroyers being attacked in the Gulf of Tonkin." White continued his whistleblowing activities in the 1968 documentary In the Year of the Pig.
Bacon said he recognized that becoming a refugee was a matter of circumstance that could affect anyone, noting that his own "blue-blooded WASP" ancestors were refugees themselves, who "came over from England in 1630, fleeing debts for all I know". After leaving his government post in 2001, Bacon became president of Refugees International, which asks world leaders to assist the millions worldwide who have fled their homes due to violence or persecution. The organization regularly advises and lobbies government and UN agencies, including peacekeeping bodies.Schudel, Matt. "Pentagon Spokesman Became an Advocate for Refugees", The Washington Post, August 16, 2009Seeley, Tina.
In a review that author Michael Frontani terms "particularly laudatory", Richard Meltzer of The Village Voice described Harrison's new work as "his best LP since All Things Must Pass and on par with, say, [Bob Dylan's] Blood on the Tracks".Frontani, p. 161. Fellow Village Voice critic Robert Christgau gave the record a B-minus and said, "This isn't as worldly as George wants you to think--or as he thinks himself, for all I know--but it ain't fulla shit either." He highlighted "This Song" and the album's second side, particularly "Crackerbox Palace", which he regarded among Harrison's best songs since his Beatles days.
McDonald was opposed to the politics of Ronald and Nancy Reagan, sating that "beneath their misleading smiles, have hearts of pig iron, which finds expression these days in bullying the minorities, the poor, the sick, the hungry, the old, and, for all I know, the lame, the halt, and the blind."Cruising, p. 80. McDonald celebrated and encouraged promiscuity, which he claimed was men's nature, stating that "all too often — in reading and in life — we look for sex and only find love; all too often we want a nice piece of meat or a nice hot suck hole and only find a wonderful human being."Smut: An STH Chapbook, ed.
At the end of the play, an epilogue thanks the audience and promises that the story will continue in a forthcoming play "with Sir John in it, and make you merry with fair Katharine of France; where, for all I know, Falstaff shall die of a sweat". In fact, Falstaff does not appear on stage in the subsequent play, Henry V, although his death is referred to. The Merry Wives of Windsor does have "Sir John in it", but cannot be the play referred to, since the passage clearly describes the forthcoming story of Henry V and his wooing of Katherine of France. Falstaff does "die of a sweat" in Henry V, but in London at the beginning of the play.
Oh, my God. ..." Derbyshire wrote that although he loved to use words that are sometimes considered obscure, he would not use the word among black people, especially among less-educated black people, out of politeness and to avoid causing someone to feel uncomfortable, regardless of any non-racial meanings he would intend. Shortly after the Washington, D.C., incident, James Poniewozik wrote in his column at Slate online magazine that some were already using "niggardly" in a way that made their motives ambiguous. He quoted a posting by a user from a reader forum at the New York Times website "who just happened to use 'niggardly'—linguistically correctly" in commenting on two witnesses to a Congressional investigation: "You can't say [the commenter]—white, black or Klingon for all I know—had racist motives.
He clashed with the Conservative governments of Anthony Eden and Harold Macmillan over the Suez crisis of 1956 and Macmillan's introduction of premium bonds (which Fisher called "squalid") and his assertion that Britain had "never had it so good". In 1958, at a time of heightened fear of nuclear war and mutual destruction between the West and the Soviet Union, Fisher said that he was "convinced that it is never right to settle any policy simply out of fear of the consequences. For all I know it is within the providence of God that the human race should destroy itself in this manner." He was also quoted as saying, "The very worst the Bomb can do is to sweep a vast number of people from this world into the next into which they must all go anyway".

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