Search for crossword answers and clues
On the cards
Answer for the clue "On the cards ", 6 letters:
likely
Alternative clues for the word likely
Word definitions for likely in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, perhaps from Old Norse likligr "likely," from likr "like" (see like (adj.)). Old English had cognate geliclic . Meaning "having the appearance of being strong and capable" is from mid-15c., though now mostly confined to American English; according ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Likely may refer to: Likely, British Columbia , Canada, a community Likely, California , United States, a census-designated place Likely McBrien (1892-1956), leading Australian rules football administrator in the Victorian Football League
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 probable; having a greater-than-even chance of occurring 2 probable adv. 1 (context obsolete English) similarly. 2 probably. n. Something or somebody considered likely.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Likely \Like"ly\, a. [Compar. Likelier (l[imac]k"l[i^]*[~e]r); superl. Likeliest .] [That is, like-like. See Like , a.] Worthy of belief; probable; credible; as, a likely story. It seems likely that he was in hope of being busy and conspicuous. --Johnson. ...
Usage examples of likely.
It seems likely that Raeder took this step largely because he wanted to anticipate any sudden aberration of his unpredictable Leader.
Indeed, it is more than likely that the first person to be suspended from the beams in the cellar of 25 Cromwell Street and sexually abused was Rosemary West herself, and that she and her husband then decided to subject other people to the experience.
It seems likely that she, too, was mercilessly abused just as her predecessors had been abused, with the addition of new and even more horrifying variations.
It is not likely, and if I had acquainted you with the truth, you might have refused your consent, and perhaps you would have been right.
I can assure you that the friend, to whom we will give a spectacle worthy of Paphos and Amathos, shall see or hear nothing likely to make him suppose that I am acquainted with his secret.
She did not like to tell the noble canon, and thinking that I was more likely to be acquainted with such emergencies she came up to me and told me all.
But it seems likely that such a plan of private ownership would not be tolerated under a Socialist government, for, first of all, a very large number of Socialists are opposed to such a plan, and, secondly, the political actionists who have favored it either have sacrificed thereby the principles of their party, or else by advocating the private ownership of small farms, have done so with the intention of deceiving farmers and small land owners in order to win their votes.
We are least likely in the modifications of these organs to mistake a merely adaptive for an essential character.
I dare say if those letters had ever reached their addressees, some of them would have been every bit as astonished as Lubov was and just about as likely to welcome their assignments.
In some manner that I do not claim to understand, admitting this water to your bellies permits Xaefyer and other males to determine if you are queenly candidates -- not that it is likely soon to do you any good.
Besides, if he ever deigned to give a thought to me, Versilov was most likely expecting a young boy just out of high school, still a mere adolescent, gaping at the world in wide-eyed wonderment.
You will likely use institutional messages when your advertising appears in a noncommercial medium such as a theater playbill or a program for a charitable event.
But when things went wrong Back Aft, Vaughn was as likely to raise his voice, a stern frown clouding his face, preaching to his officers and men, sometimes even lecturing broken equipment.
Bridge was to the Agami lords, it was likely more plain than Minch was used to.
There is no question that the world would be better off if Saddam did not have these weapons, but the danger is considerably less than if Saddam were allowed to acquire nuclear weapons, which he believes will deter the United States and Israel and thereby would encourage him to engage in the kind of foreign aggression that would be likely to provoke a nuclear crisis.