Definition & Meaning | English word IMPROBABILITIES


IMPROBABILITIES

Definitions of IMPROBABILITIES

  1. plural of improbability.

Number of letters

15

Is palindrome

No

39
AB
ABI
BA
BAB
BI
BIL
ES
IE
IES
IL
ILI

AB
ABB
ABE


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Examples of Using IMPROBABILITIES in a Sentence

  • If this is true, it follows that the second theory, that James went to Gowrie House to specifically kill the Ruthvens, is invalid and that his own account of the occurrence, in spite of the glaring improbabilities which it involved, was substantially true.
  • In his review in The New York Times, Stephen Holden called the film "a heaping bowl of Scottish blarney", a "manipulative tearjerker", and "a fraudulent yarn riddled with plot holes and improbabilities and topped by a cynical final twist that pulls the rug out from under the story".
  • Kurt Dahlke from DVD Talk wrote in his review of the film, "Though derivative of other Slasher Movies, plagued by the annoying improbabilities of all A-to-B horror efforts, filled with bickering dorks, and pretty slow to get started, Humongous eventually gets to a weird, frenetic payoff".
  • The film received mostly negative reviews, with criticisms centered on some of the plot's improbabilities, particularly when the boys arrive in Hollywood and begin tracking down Monroe, in addition to the contrivances of the script.
  • Audiences will be transported from the heart of Mexico, to unexplored worlds of fantasy, where strange creatures from supernatural realms illuminate and come to life in spellbinding set-pieces of physical improbabilities.
  • Its segments are rather jerkily and sloppily tacked together, and its improbabilities and illogic soon overshadow its wit.
  • Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote: "Despite its share of improbabilities, if Vaamanan (U/A) manages to impact the viewer to a certain extent it is mainly because of the raciness in the last lap".
  • The modern distinction between history and fiction did not exist in the early sixteenth century and the grossest improbabilities pervade many historical accounts found in the early modern print market.
  • Writing for The Christian Science Monitor, Heller McAlpin highlighted how The Last Animal is filled with "outlandish albeit endearing improbabilities" and concluded that the novel "is a hairy but cuddly beast of a novel that sheds life lessons, some heartwarming, many sticky with sentiment".


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