Plausibly in a sentence as an adverb

Whether there's a pilot in the aircraft can not plausibly be a proxy for whether you should blow someone up or not.

That is, you can plausibly make me want a BigMac over a Whopper, but you can't make be want a burger if I'm already full.

Rules on civil asset-forfeiture allow the police to seize anything which they can plausibly claim was the proceeds of a crime.

It's hard to turn down clients, or cool ideas, or whatever, but you have to, because there will always, always be more stuff to do than you can plausibly handle.

", in which case the answer is available to Paypal's Hadoop cluster but plausibly "Yes, with a p value which would make a statistician weep.

Public defenders are arguably sufficient to defend against what he might plausibly be charged with: burglary, assault, etc.

I think the idea is that it's very rare for the indigent to be plausibly charged with an exceedingly complicated crime which is expensive to defend against.

The value of the digital economy is important to any countries future growth that the central banks could plausibly take the initiative here.

This means that you cannot really argue plausibly that all civilizations fail to do this - it would take trivial effort for just one faction within just one advanced civilization to set this underway.

> It also gives you deniability: If a judge or policeman orders you to hand over your password, you can plausibly say that you dont actually know itThe UK law requires that you make the encrypted data intelligible.

It's totally plausible for bing to do this because everyone realizes that google has gotten to the point where microsoft can plausibly compete with them!Page rank was really cutting edge, but that was 10 years ago, yet it is still their primary mechanism.

It used to have an evil twin, the Underhanded C Contest [1] where the aim was to make an innocent program also do something evil in such a way that that it can be plausibly denied as accidental when the 'bug' is detected in a code review.

I'd happily answer hypothetical questions about situations that could plausibly come up during this position, but working out number of golf balls in a bus doesnt show you how i would solve the problem of the database running slow or validation checks not working correctly.

Plausibly definitions

adverb

easy to believe on the basis of available evidence; "he talked plausibly before the committee"; "he will probably win the election"

See also: credibly believably probably