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Likely   /lˈaɪkli/   Listen
adjective
Likely  adj.  (compar. likelier; superl. likeliest)  
1.
Worthy of belief; probable; credible; as, a likely story. "It seems likely that he was in hope of being busy and conspicuous."
2.
Having probability; having or giving reason to expect; followed by the infinitive; as, it is likely to rain.
3.
Similar; like; alike. (Obs.)
4.
Such as suits; good-looking; pleasing; agreeable; handsome.
5.
Having such qualities as make success probable; well adapted to the place; promising; as, a likely young man; a likely servant.
6.
Improbable; unlikely; used ironically; as, a likely story. (informal)



adverb
Likely  adv.  In all probability; probably. "While man was innocent he was likely ignorant of nothing that imported him to know."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Likely" Quotes from Famous Books



... difference be not great make choice of that which bendeth most toward the North-West, for that way you shall soonest find the other sea." The other sea, of course, was the Pacific, or as Englishmen were likely to say, the South Seas, whose waters also washed the shores of China. Vain as was this hope of trade with the Orient through America, it was destined for survival, in one form or another, through many years. As late as the middle of the nineteenth ...
— The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624 • Wesley Frank Craven

... swallow. Set, not in the centre of the square, nor made to close it, but on one side, it was thus placed, it is said, in order to avoid the burned houses of the Uberti, who had been expelled the city. However this may be, and its position is so fortunate that it is not likely to be due to any such chance, Arnolfo di Cambio began it in February 1299, taking as his model, so some have thought, the Rocca of the Conti Guidi of the Casentino, which Lapo his father had built. Under the arches of the fourth storey are painted the coats ...
— Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa • Edward Hutton

... said she, wiping her eyes with her apron, "depend upon it, whatever your papa settles on is right. He knows what's suitable for a young gentleman; and it's only likely as a young gentleman born and bred should outgrow to be beyond what an old woman like me can do for him. Though there's no tutors nor none of them will ever love you better than poor Nurse Bundle, my deary. And there's no one ever has loved ...
— A Flat Iron for a Farthing - or Some Passages in the Life of an only Son • Juliana Horatia Ewing

... Christians celebrated the capture of Tunis by a massacre of some 30,000 inhabitants and returned home, thanking God that at last Barbarossa was done for. Indeed, with the loss of his fleet and his newly acquired province it seemed as if the great pirate was not likely to give much trouble, but the Christians had made the mistake of leaving the work only ...
— A History of Sea Power • William Oliver Stevens and Allan Westcott

... existence of this state of ponderable matter was quite unknown up to such a relatively recent date has been completely forgotten to-day. Moreover, it is so remote from current notions that anyone who now calls attention to van Helmont's discovery is quite likely to be met with incredulity. As a result, there is no account of the event that puts it in its true setting. In what follows pains are taken to present the facts in the form in which one comes to know them through van Helmont's own account, ...
— Man or Matter • Ernst Lehrs


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