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65 Sentences With "just possibly"

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

They just possibly know a few things you don't know.
Just possibly they're replacing a short taxi or metro hop.
Just possibly, an Amazonian fish could provide them with it.■
Can't you maybe, just possibly, cut him a little slack?
Did the Arnau's feel like competition was possibly, just possibly, diluting their USP?
But, just possibly, Ms Banerjee is facing a shift in mood among voters.
But a combination of time, events and Parliament could—just possibly—turn Brexit into Bremain.
The aphids are everywhere, it appears, and we have (just possibly) the government to blame.
And just possibly showing our nation&aposs leaders what can be accomplished when everyone pulls together.
And similarly, it is not something that every investor could just possibly take on in my opinion.
If Mr Macron gets it right, France could, just possibly, be at the start of a new cycle.
And so the promotion set out to find an opponent that just maybe, just possibly might not kill him.
It may not be the novel we long for, but it could, just possibly, be the novel we deserve.
Different, and with a lower demand for people and capital and just possibly with a lower ceiling for economic growth.
The first is to form a minority government either with the FDP, or with the Greens (or, just possibly, alone).
By forever inclining toward his partners in conversation, this Murdoch embodiment looks poised for verbal seduction — or just possibly assault.
A summit between President Trump and Kim Jong Un poses great risks but, just possibly, the opportunity for great rewards.
The lure of defeating the government and, just possibly, precipitating an election, will surely drive most Labour MPs to vote no.
Just possibly, this might have the happy side-effect of making Europeans—most of whom are too heavy—a bit slimmer.
Or, just possibly, he could choose to be remembered not for his manifold faults but for a single act of bravery.
I stand perfectly still, Jurassic Park style, and pretend I didn't just possibly lodge a cork in someone's ass across the pool.
Possibly, just possibly, Amazon will find new ways to use the routers to infer more about customers and sell them more junk.
One of President Trump's Cabinet members just possibly violated a federal law by wearing a pair of "Make America Great Again" socks.
Every year, N.B.A. teams make routine calls to check out the prospects in whom they might just possibly invest millions of dollars.
This puts him only a couple of points behind Mr Fillon, and in a position—just possibly—to overtake the Gaullist candidate too.
The Afghan people are now hopeful for the first time in decades that the 40-year-long war may just possibly be coming to an end.
In 2020, or just possibly before that, or perhaps not until 2024, the United States is going to face a similar question in the aftermath of Trump.
But as we've learned from bleary early-morning nominations presenters – and just-possibly tipsy stars handing out statuettes at the Golden Globes – pronouncing names correctly isn't always easy.
Sounds like a setup for creating tensions — and, just possibly, establishing human connections where people learn that they're not quite as different from one another as they thought.
A. Just possibly, but only if you can figure out a way to travel with your eyes closed as well, and if you wash your hands frequently, too.
News clips show Yellen testifying before Congress suggesting that, maybe, just possibly, the United States could catch the economic virus that is causing some economies overseas to tank.
With 2FA turned on, even if someone gains your email password (like maybe just possibly through a phishing attack) they still lack the necessary credentials to get into your inbox.
The reasons, recent interviews with her associates suggest, include the difficulties of maintaining the patent, the compromises required of the homeowner and, just possibly, Ms. Gabe's contrary, proudly iconoclastic temperament.
If the moderate Democratic ground opens up, the temptation for Michael Bloomberg to fill it may prove overwhelming, or, just possibly, another candidate — Kamala Harris, Cory Booker — will gain that elusive traction.
It could also ask to stop the clock or, just possibly, hold a new referendum to reverse its 2016 vote to leave - something May herself has insisted her government will not do.
With as many as 60,000 firearm owners attending a convention, "the relationship is not just possibly due to 80,000 members not using firearms as much during the date of the convention," Jena said.
"The darkness turned London into a palimpsest," Paul reflects: That knot of boisterous young men by the crush barriers, they were probably soldiers home from Dunkirk, or just possibly stragglers from Boudicca's army.
And, since no one actually knows how the biotechnological future will turn out, just possibly the surveys it is sponsoring will reveal riches that make the gold rushes of the 19th century look like chump change.
I share the feeling of many that his election just couldn't have been quite real, that just possibly, and hopefully, we fell into some kind of realm behind the looking glass or are having a bad dream.
As a result, officials and diplomats say, most are ready to postpone Brexit from March 29, at least by a few weeks, either to ensure an orderly withdrawal or, just possibly, give time for a second referendum.
That's especially evident in the accounts of those who have worked in urban school systems, trying to maintain order and, just possibly, inspire a sense of hope among students who feel defeated from the day they arrive.
Almost all of the polls have moved decisively in her favor, the debates were a "disaster" for Donald Trump, and the GOP might be seriously at risk of losing control of the Senate and, just possibly, the House.
Only through the daily pain, grit, labour, and conscious effort of daily construction might we, just possibly, remember that our war memorials are to remind us to try for peace, at all times and in any way possible.
"Glengarry" had its world premiere in 1983 at the National Theater, and it gets revived here roughly once a decade; the director Sam Yates's current production marks the play's fourth London airing and also, just possibly, its breeziest.
The corruption scandal erupting around Bolivia's president Evo Morales appears to be following the plotline of a classic Latin American telenovela, complete with a femme fatale tricking her lover, a long-lost lovechild and, just possibly, a happy ending.
That promised to set back the Iranian nuclear programme by more than a decade, a prize in itself, and just possibly to break the cycle of threat and counter-threat that have dogged relations since the Iranian revolution 40 years ago.
Call it posturing or postulating or just possibly depressing, but players association vice president Carmelo Anthony told ESPN he is "skeptical" that a new deal will get done in time for Thursday, when owners or players could opt out of the current CBA.
But, he said, if a pregnant woman — with her doctor's blessings — can walk, jog, swim or otherwise be physically active, she may improve her own health and also, just possibly, instill an incipient love of exercise in the child growing within her.
As someone who has been a friend of yours for 30 years, I'm available to give you advice on how to at least try to make amends, if possible address those that you've wronged, and just possibly find a path to heal and redeem yourself.
A parade of witnesses from the art world are to testify, just possibly including Glafira Rosales, the former Long Island dealer who, for 22013 years, consigned fakes to Knoedler, passing them off as masterworks from a mysterious collection based in Zurich and Mexico City.
At the Royal Courts of Justice in central London, that question was being tested last week at the start of a legal case that could — just possibly — keep Britain inside the 503-nation bloc, at least pending a more comprehensive plan for withdrawal, known as Brexit.
Wanuri Kahiu, a Kenyan filmmaker, knows that talented filmmakers "exist from the CAR [Central African Republic] to the DRC [Democratic Republic of Congo], they just possibly haven't had the opportunity to be able to get the funding or resources to make their film," she told CNN.
A 2015 study suggests that the networks of neurons in the brain just possibly could be preserved—in other words, the mind as well as the matter—when Alcor researchers showed that nematode worms could be frozen and revived with their memories (crude as they are) intact.
At this point, Democrats might be heading toward a landslide victory, capturing the White House by large margins, securing control of the Senate for the first time since 2010 and possibly, just possibly, taking over a majority of the House of Representatives (though the odds of that remain low).
Related: The Year the 'Pink Tide' Turned: Latin America in 2015 The corruption scandal erupting around Bolivia's president Evo Morales appears to be following the plotline of a classic Latin American telenovela, complete with a femme fatale tricking her lover, a long-lost lovechild and, just possibly, a happy ending.
Then the election happens, and the House votes to take the health insurance away outright from at least 24 million fellow citizens, to curtail it for another 129 million, and possibly, just possibly, make every single man, woman and child in the country effectively unable to access meaningful care with the exception — of course!
Coming after six successive defeats in the House of Commons, the passage of an act designed to prevent a no-deal Brexit, the resignation of two ministers and the removal of the Tory whip from 21 rebellious MPs, even the ebullient Mr Johnson might have been expected to feel some embarrassment or, just possibly, shame.
However, a painful emptiness persisted. She returned to Christ, asking to return his gift, and wondering if she might, just possibly, exchange it for another. "And for what would you exchange it?" Christ asked.
The melody and first verse of To the Hundreds of Drury I Write are in John Barry Talley's Secular Music in Colonial Annapolis, 1988. The Night Before Larry Was Stretched is just possibly a reworking of, or may at least have been inspired by To the Hundreds of Drury.
With disarming candour she returned to Christ, asking to return His gift, and wondering if she might, just possibly, exchange it for another. “And for what would you exchange it?” Christ asked. “Lord, said Lutgarde, I would exchange it for your Heart.” Christ then reached into Lutgarde and, removing her heart, replaced it with His own, at the same time hiding her heart within His breast.
Bridget was likely named after St. Bridget of Sweden.Anne F. Sutton and Livia Visser-Fuchs, The Royal Funerals of the House of York at Windsor, Richard III Society, 2005, p. 110. In the spring, or just possibly the summer, of 1483 Bridget was ill, lying 'sick ...in the Wardrobe', that is, in the storehouse and occasional royal residence just north of Baynard's Castle and the church of St Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe in the city of London. For much of 1483 and the early months of 1484, however, she was with her mother and older sisters in semi-confinement within the Sanctuary of Westminster Abbey.
Worth spent most of the 1970s in North America. She was an acclaimed Hedda Gabler at Stratford, Ontario, a role she considered one of her more satisfying achievements and which prompted Walter Kerr to write in The New York Times "Miss Worth is just possibly the best actress in the world." She played Princess Kosmonopolis in Tennessee Williams's Sweet Bird of Youth opposite Christopher Walken, which brought her a second Tony Award. She was Madame Ranevskaya in The Cherry Orchard, for which she received another Tony nomination and which featured Raúl Juliá, Mary Beth Hurt and Meryl Streep, whose career was in its beginning stages.
Deception and abuse are the main motifs. Victor has been (non-sexually) abusing Sym almost from her birth, imposing his own beliefs as the only possible reality, grooming her to do his bidding, maintaining control by ruthlessly dividing her from parents and peers, planning her future to suit his own ends. Bruch and his 'son' Sigurd attempt to con Briggs but end up conned themselves when their mark turns out to be a psychotic fantasist. Lastly, Sym has to face up to her beloved Titus being only a creature of her own imagination, a response to her desperate need (though this disillusionment at least is slightly softened at the end when it is implied he may just possibly be something more).
The purpose of it is sensation, and that it generally provides in the colorfulness of its detail and in the flood of menace toward the end." Variety called the film "one of Alfred Hitchcock's better thrillers" which "combines technical and artistic skills in a manner that makes this an unusually good piece of murder mystery entertainment." Time called it "just possibly the second-most entertaining picture (after The 39 Steps) ever made by Alfred Hitchcock" and a film in which there is "never an instant ... when Director Hitchcock is not in minute and masterly control of his material." The reviewer also noted the "occasional studied lapses of taste and, more important, the eerie sense a Hitchcock audience has of reacting in a manner so carefully foreseen as to seem practically foreordained.
Commentators have generally accepted the trial jury's verdict that the Claimant was Arthur Orton. However, McWilliam cites the monumental study by Douglas Woodruff (1957), in which the author posits that the Claimant could just possibly have been Roger Tichborne. Woodruff's principal argument is the sheer improbability that anyone could conceive such an imposture from scratch, at such a distance, and then implement it: "[I]t was carrying effrontery beyond the bounds of sanity if Arthur Orton embarked with a wife and retinue and crossed the world, knowing that they would all be destitute if he did not succeed in convincing a woman he had never met and knew nothing about first-hand, that he was her son".Woodruff, pp. 452–53 In 1876, while the Claimant was serving his prison sentence, interest was briefly raised by the claims of William Cresswell, an inmate of a Sydney lunatic asylum, that he was Arthur Orton.

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