Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "quite possible"

  • It's quite possible I may be using her in the morning.

  • It's quite possible, if they're the sort of scoundrels they seem to be, that they might be up against the Secret Service in some way quite apart from their dealings with you.

  • But it is quite possible for a man to be manly and yet tender, and to the highest type of women it is the combination of strength and tenderness in a man that appeals beyond aught else.

  • The girl who reads this book may tell her lover with confidence that it is quite possible to stop smoking, and that after a little while the craving wholly disappears.

  • But, luckily, it is quite possible to reject all those folk-tales of questionable morals and objectionable taste and still have plenty to choose from.

  • It should be quite possible to be serious without being solemn, and cheerful without being hilarious.

  • It is quite possible that Julius Caesar, The Tempest, and Sohrab and Rustum may prove impracticable for such a class, and that something easier would have to be substituted.

  • Quite possible," said Magdalen, without a moment's flinching from the answer.

  • It is quite possible that my own profits may reach one or two miserable hundred more.

  • Luther’s desire for learning was so great, and his impulsive character so marked, that it is quite possible that he cherished such a project.

  • It is quite possible that he did not wish to deny the correct sense these words might convey, for, elsewhere in his controversies, he appears unaware of the exaggeration of his language.

  • But as I show in that section referred to, it is quite possible to accept as true in their several planes both predestination and free will.

  • It is quite possible that, as Metchnikoff maintains in his extraordinarily illuminating "Nature of Man," we are dealing with an irresolvable tangle of disharmonies.

  • It is quite possible to maintain that everything is a chaotic assembly, that any part might be destroyed without affecting any other part.

  • Still, it is quite possible that it will come to an early and sudden end.

  • It is quite possible, indeed, that in doing this small service for your father I had no thoughts of you at all.

  • It is quite possible for a good man to slip a piece of money into the palm of some miserable being standing in a public place, and yet this may be done solely with the idea of relieving distress without a thought of the onlookers.

  • Quite possible, however, and worthy of belief are the cases in which the child has been heard to cry during the progress of parturition--that is, during delivery.

  • It is quite possible that, being an operation of a serious nature, it is never performed early enough, the patient being fatally weakened by inanition.

  • I think it is quite possible he would admit that they are, and would say that he never meant either to assert or to imply the contrary.

  • But I have admitted that it is quite possible none do so: it may be the case that whenever a thing exists, it is also at the same time perceived, for anything that I have said or shall say to the contrary.

  • I think it is quite possible that we shall some day be able to verify either the belief that we are immortal or the belief that we are not.

  • This being so, it is quite possible that a maniac may confuse his personality with one or more demons; and speak and act consistently with the delusion.

  • It may be conceded that the occurrence of some anomalous event as a bare objective fact is quite possible, even on the principles of pantheism or atheism.

  • It is quite possible, that the demoniac of Gadara may have imagined himself possessed by a legion of demons, and have spoken and acted accordingly, whilst he was at the same time labouring under simple mania.

  • It is quite possible, however, and even probable, that the actual height attained by the ice-sheet in the north-west Highlands was more than 3000 feet.

  • It is quite possible, of course, that all those boulder-clays may be the product of one epoch, laid down during more or less considerable oscillations of an ice-sheet.

  • It is quite possible, however, that patches of such deposits may yet be met with underneath our younger moraines, and they ought certainly to be looked for.

  • It is quite possible, of course, that here and there in the valleys of western and southern Europe some of the Pleistocene alluvia may be of pre-glacial age.

  • In the first place it feels very different, and in the second place, it is quite possible to lose one sense and keep the other.

  • In fact, it is quite possible, to manufacture a lizard, perfectly healthy and apparently happy, with eight legs and three or four tails.

  • It is quite possible to take these eggs when the single cell has divided into two, and shake these two apart into two separate half eggs.

  • For it is quite possible to remain equable when surveying the things of this life, and then when ascending into the higher world to show evidences of a want of equanimity all the greater because it had only been held in check.

  • For in this sphere it is quite possible to understand things which one is not yet able to observe.

  • But all this is quite possible when we regard time as merely the subjective condition under which all our intuitions take place.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quite possible" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    general truths; giving birth; luik efter; quite alone; quite ashamed; quite aware; quite certain; quite early; quite easily; quite easy; quite fresh; quite happy; quite impossible; quite know; quite large; quite like; quite plain; quite small; quite smooth; quite sure; quite the; quite understand; quite well; refined products; three regiments; uterine disease