[
UK
/kənsˈiːvəbli/
]
[ US /kənˈsivəbɫi/ ]
[ US /kənˈsivəbɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
within the realm of possibility
the weather may conceivably change
How To Use conceivably In A Sentence
- Were your brain appreciably larger, large enough to put the strain on your Princess Grace neck that your loppy preaxial digits put upon your wrists, you conceivably would possess a superior intellect. Even Cowgirls Get The Blues
- He was different; he was peculiar in the most conceivably beautiful way.
- An incorporated trait of resistance to a commercial pesticide might conceivably show up in other plants.
- You might conceivably nip out to the concessions stand, visit the loo and still come back to the same scene.
- It's jutting out from the corner of the roof, so it could conceivably be a gargoyle proper or a grotesque.
- You could not conceivably get more resentment and accusation than is documented there.
- Tom @900: Could the name conceivably be Bayntun instead of "Bathtun"? Making Light: Open thread 134
- Time will tell, but vehicles could conceivably be manufactured to use vegetable oil as the standard fuel, much like the flex-fuel vehicles designed to run on ethanol.
- Some of them - or others like them - might conceivably have to be called as witnesses.
- Conceivably the poem was written at the request of the victim's relatives, perhaps in the attempt to redeem a reputation sullied by the manner of his death.