Implausible in a sentence as an adjective

I hadn't heard about that, and it seems a bit implausible to me.

And if it is happening, right now, is it implausible?

I don't know why people thinks this is a joke, that it is: "illegal," "implausible" and "kind of silly".

Honestly, I found Horvath's account to be fairly implausible from the first time I read it.

", "What if too many people give implausible answers, can it be corrected for or will the poll be junked?

I had great fun choosing implausible alternate paths as he would try to do this regularly.

There are certainly nutjobs who swallow implausible theories whole.

When you've made good on enough implausible claims, the criteria for "implausible" change.

It cracks me up that the most implausible part of this story is the idea that everyone's privacy would be so well protected.

On of the basic tools courts use to filter out frivolous litigation is to quickly dispose of suits that are implausible on their face.

I find these edge cases extremely implausible, and counter to the way crimes are investigated and prosecuted.

It is implausible that 1943-1945 Japan could have achieved anything like this, regardless of technical expertise.

Spoofing IP addresses is wildly more difficult than this, and implausible in the BitTorrent scenario.

It's implausible that these characters just happen to appear with a language-like frequency distribution and are all meaningless spaces.

Why can't it be many or all of these things?I find it highly implausible that google has as strong a desire to form simple, narrow narratives around its strategy and ambitions as bloggers and the media do.

After we achieve mostly-realistic physics simulations I look forward to the new middleware that re-enables implausible effects.

Implausible definitions

adjective

having a quality that provokes disbelief; "gave the teacher an implausible excuse"

adjective

highly imaginative but unlikely; "a farfetched excuse"; "an implausible explanation"

See also: farfetched