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fair chance

NOUN
  1. a reasonable probability of success

How To Use fair chance In A Sentence

  • ‘Wheat does when it gets a fair chance,’ said the bunniah. The Olive Fairy Book
  • He stands a fair chance of going abroad.
  • So there's at least a fair chance participants will see a few squads of bluewing teal darting over the cordgrass or hear the laughing call of early-arriving white-fronted geese.
  • The claim asserts that this is too fast and does not enable an applicant to have a fair chance of putting forward his claim properly.
  • The trouble with modern policing is that it doesn't give villains a fair chance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The feeling was that we would have a fair chance of funding for this sort of thing.
  • That would be a great achievement, and one at which I have a fair chance of success.
  • Both the blacksmith, my grandfather on my mother's side, and my father had been centurions and both were retired, but the Legion is something that never leaves you and Remus stood a fair chance.
  • No doubt he is a little overawed by the array of rugby knowledge here so let's give him a fair chance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The private sector must be given a fair chance to compete for local authority contracts.
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