How To Use Odds In A Sentence

  • In a 1983 ad, the Gillette man was depicted as the tiny weakling on a basketball court full of giants; his shaver, he said, helped him even the odds.
  • And so, against all the odds, and all the elements, Powell got to make his wistful and impassioned film.
  • Welcome the hopeless odds of meeting highly trained soldiers face-to-face. CONFESSIONAL
  • Against all odds, he succeeded in carving out a career in the media.
  • One of my dazed wits tried to tell me the odds against this actually happening.
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  • However long the odds, he couldn't bring himself to turn away all those labors of hope and industry and self-promotion.
  • The odds are, shall we say, somewhat large, and the car was still there by the end of the evening.
  • The rally has defied all odds and logic with only two, short interruptions since it began its climb in August 1982.
  • Data collection and analysis Positive and negative likelihood ratios (LR) and diagnostic odds ratios (DOR) were calculated.
  • The awards are given to children who achieved something against the odds.
  • The odds against bringing it back upstream, through the tangle of brambles and nettles and against such a flow, were minuscule. Times, Sunday Times
  • The odds were stacked against her making it in the cut-throat music industry after a tough upbringing. The Sun
  • Though Cook was a seasoned campaigner known for beating the odds, he could not overcome a severe loss in public confidence at the end of a quarrelsome and often hostile primary campaign.
  • On current form most bookmakers will surely be offering short odds on them managing even the one point this time around.
  • A was first synthesized in 1891, the first evidence of its estrogenicity came from experiments in the 1930's feeding BPA to ovariectomised rats (Dodds and Lawson 1936, 1938). Consumer Reports Concerned about The Chemical Bisphenol A
  • Mike Battaglia, oddsmaker at Churchill Downs since 1975 and one of horse racing's most respected handicappers, will be an analyst for NBC at the Belmont Stakes.
  • As the characters struggle to be human against all the odds the play reflects the struggle that all humans face in life.
  • What were the odds against?
  • I will be courageous and undismayed in the face of odds.
  • You name your favorite contemporary artist and odds are they are involved.
  • As I kept pointing out on CH4 course bookmakers just kept shortening up odds without lengthening others. The Sun
  • There was an element of ill luck, but every so often, as gamblers would tell us, long odds do come off.
  • Odds ratios were calculated for the risk of fracture in the arthritic women.
  • Against overwhelming odds, I surrendered myself and watched a glut of documentaries about the military hardware.
  • You could say the same about director Bille Woodruff's last movie, Honey, which against all the odds, I totally loved.
  • By analyzing 134 informative microsatellite markers dispersed throughout the genome on 39 meioses, we localized the king mutation to the distal region of Chromosome 5 with a peak logarithm of odds PLoS Biology: New Articles
  • My gut feeling is that insurance companies are the Vegas books, and the actuaries are the odds makers. Blog maverick
  • Against all the odds the motion was passed but it later emerged that at the time of the voting most of the delegates were at Mass.
  • Some historians studying the brutal battles for the Mediterranean have ended by asking an almost unmentionable question, which Woodall's plain account does not address: should Malta have been held at all, against such odds?
  • But the odds of passing the amendment are slim.
  • We found no difference in the values of odds ratio or association.
  • The odds were stacked against the 17-year-old Toowoomba student from the start, but he triumphed anyway.
  • The odds of him dying early, of Smith having early onset Alzheimer's Disease, hell, of just getting a minor concussion which he plays through and doesn't dare tell anyone because he's afraid of being fired -- NFL players have the crappiest contracts in all of professional major league sports, not to mention those contracts are year-to-year (if I remember correctly) -- just went sky-fracking-high. Archive 2009-10-01
  • Some women do manage to achieve business success against all odds.
  • He overcame these and tackled his job with enthusiasm and flair that got results against all the odds.
  • The bookies were offering odds of 3 to 1, but there were no takers.
  • Supporting fast-growing businesses is at odds with improving productivity, academics warn. Times, Sunday Times
  • Burton's flair for image seems always at odds with the story at hand.
  • I mean, I don't see any clear, odds-on favorite.
  • For any 'pressman' that think they know how to solve the problem, odds are you probably never did the Intaglio work. Chicagotribune.com - News
  • In many respects it is conducted in more earnest, for higher stakes, and against greater odds than political life in liberal democracies.
  • But we can shorten those odds by being alert to the danger in our midst. The Sun
  • The odds are that, whoever romps home to victory, there'll be plenty of laughs along the way.
  • Republican manliness is not at odds with such unguarded displays of affect, for the "loftiness" and Love and Merit in the Maritime Historical Novel: Cooper and Scott
  • The British Air Force succeeded despite overwhelming odds against them.
  • She pieced together odds and ends of cloth.
  • You would have to offer him pretty short odds to suggest otherwise.
  • But, alas, you simply can't beat casino games with pre-established odds against you.
  • Freely on offer at 4/1 before the off Rockstown Lad made a nonsense of those odds as he winged out of trap five leaving his rivals floundering in his wake.
  • Incidentally the odds on the hunted fox being killed are about evens.
  • Remarkably and against all odds, the drugs are sometimes seen when the truck unloads at the Michigan landfill.
  • In all he fought 257 combats at Verdun, most of them against heavy odds, and shot down eleven planes.
  • In everyday life, the greater the distance between points A and B, and the more rugged the intervening landscape, the bleaker are the odds for success of a blindfolded walk, even—or perhaps especially—when following a simple-minded rule like “always climb higher; never back down.” The Edge of Evolution
  • Of course this could be a coincidence but we can calculate the odds against this.
  • For example, odds for endometrial tumors fell by 39 percent among long-term statin users, while the risk for melanoma dropped by 19 percent, the study found. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • Reducing the example to just two balls would make the odds of an orderly arrangement occurring more likely.
  • It features not one but two happy endings, as he not only tracks down his real father, but overcomes immense odds to win a place in the USAF's prestigious Tops in Blue entertainment troupe.
  • Bookmakers are offering punters odds of 6-1 on the horse Red Devil winning the race.
  • The odds are otherwise too heavily stacked against them. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bookmakers are offering only short odds on the favourite.
  • As usual, the hero was facing insuperable odds .
  • In the first case, he'd have no hope, but in the second the odds were sixty-forty in his favour.
  • But Ireland have always enjoyed upsetting the odds. The Sun
  • I went to the most sophisticated game, baccarat, and naively asked the burly pit boss what were the odds of winning at this game.
  • He chose Duan Qirui, who thus, on 24 November 1924, came back to power against all the odds.
  • It is understandable to feel overwhelmed in social situations - a convivial atmosphere is so at odds with how you feel. Times, Sunday Times
  • The outcomes are such that people repatriate with their family when they've formerly been at odds with them.
  • Odds ratios and corresponding confidence intervals were calculated to measure the main effect of diabetes on eating disorders.
  • However, if you take some simple precautions you can greatly reduce the odds of being mugged or getting mowed down by a carioca motorist, and feel almost as safe that's a big "almost" as you would in New York or Paris. Chris McGowan: Carnaval in Rio: How to Have Fun and Not Get Mugged
  • Daily, books come by the cartload to Ms. Klausner's Atlanta home, putting her at odds with the mailman, the UPS delivery guy and her husband, Stan, a business analyst for the Army.
  • She put in some clothes, odds and ends, and make-up.
  • Odds against a cool breeze about a thousand to one.
  • The whole idea of the proposed redevelopment of the centre is farcical, unnecessary and at odds with what many people really want.
  • I don't have an explanation - I'd like to have one but I don't - but in the meantime, without evidence, the odds of your position being right are so infinitesimal as to be irrelevant.
  • The two Pacific giants remain at odds on many security issues but both want to avoid a crisis on the Korean peninsula. Times, Sunday Times
  • Investors may find that their money is funding activities at odds with their values, with significant tracker investments in sectors such as tobacco and fossil fuels. Times, Sunday Times
  • But all too often large companies stack the odds against innovation. Times, Sunday Times
  • An adviser said there was no reason why the two countries should remain at odds.
  • Carl Jolly met us outside, disappointed, he was still undiscouraged which is amazing when you consider the additional odds he is up against. KOLO - HomePage - Headlines
  • Far from it, what they say for public consumption appears to be at odds with what they are saying privately.
  • Although it is at odds with our predominant medical ethical culture, many families and patients desire nondisclosure of bad news.
  • That, of course, would increase the odds that the gambling industry will emerge from the federal study without a scratch.
  • And correspondent Wyatt Cenac reported live from Heaven on which Republican was the odds-on favorite to receive the "coveted God endorsement. Cheers & Jeers: Jon Stewart in 2012
  • The bookies were offering odds of 3 to 1, but there were no takers.
  • The room was crammed with suitcases, footwear, clothes and other odds and ends strewn carelessly around.
  • Sometimes overcoming enormous odds, mostly because of racial prejudice, black athletes changed the sporting landscape in the United States.
  • Add in that he was out of action for a couple of months earlier this year with a knee injury and it's clear the odds were stacked against a comeback.
  • A separate Palestinian state would most likely remain unviable and impoverished, whereas a "Jewish" state with a rising non-Jewish minority will increasingly be at odds with the principles of democracy and equality. Letters to the Editor
  • Odds like that are the shortest for 20 years and bookies face a six-figure payout.
  • Hire an exact clone and the odds are good that the problems that exist now won't go away and new opportunities will go undiscovered.
  • While semi-autonomous features are becoming increasingly common, they have raised questions about whether their ability to reduce driver fatigue is outweighed by their potential to increase the odds of an accident.
  • So the main hook is that you have this kid born into a working class family of petty criminals but against all odds, manages to become the greatest hero the world has seen and fight the good fight. Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » Eren’s Review Forum
  • There are heavy odds against people succeeding in such a bad economic climate.
  • So long as the President of Argentina doesn't invade the Falklands[Sentence dictionary], they must be odds-on to lose the next election – provided Labour gets this right.
  • In some cases some succeeded against all the odds.
  • I did a few odds and ends in the garden on Saturday, played a round of golf on Sunday morning.
  • By young adulthood 7% were daily users and in young women this level of use was associated with over five times the odds of depression and anxiety found in non-users.
  • I'll lay odds of three to one that he gets the job.
  • He was bucking the odds when he bought that failing business.
  • When you're dealing with tickets on multiple carriers - also called interline tickets - the odds of something going wrong increase exponentially with each airline added to your itinerary. HeraldNet.com Local, Sports, Business and Entertainment News
  • Its glory days came when Spitfire and Hurricane pilots scrambled to defeat Hitler's Luftwaffe despite overwhelming odds.
  • But the Sacred Order of Libertines doesn't really have an official position on such matters; that would be quite at odds with our libertinism. Outer Alliance Pride Day
  • The odds were slightly loaded against us.
  • In a crowded world the odds had been rigged in favour of turtles. Times, Sunday Times
  • But it's not unlikely. The odds depend on the length and the rigorousness of the trip.
  • Gerald was no longer the odds-on favourite to win the contest.
  • Against all the odds Keble extended their lead to 17-3 and, despite a mini-revival from Brasenose they held on to this advantage at half time.
  • That's a lesson we badly need to learn if we're going to make sound policy decisions in an era in which science and politics seem increasingly at odds.
  • Odds are your suitcases will greet you when you deplane, but those odds lengthen when applied to more unorthodox baggage, which surely will come under careful inspection.
  • But it was in implementing privatization, against odds that could only be called insurmountable, that The Commanding Heights
  • But the modes of doing so are changing with the current technological and institutional developments and our historical habits are increasingly at odds with the contemporary exigencies, instrumentalities and methodologies.
  • This shortens the odds for the other pub winners as far as the grand prize of a digital camera goes with two absentee winners not going into the draw.
  • In which case, the odds are high - 99/100 to be exact - that the prize lies behind that one unchosen door that Monty did not open.
  • Pundits say Drobac is a long shot at best, but the cash-strapped challenger vows to defy the oddsmakers.
  • The kedgeree reminded me in many ways of the jollof rice my grandmother used to cook, using palm oil instead of groundnut oil and any odds and ends she found in her kitchen... Archive 2009-09-01
  • He looks unlikely to grab the prize as Anthony Hutton is the red-hot favourite and is now odds-on to win at 4-5.
  • In the semi-finals, Gregson took the final pink to pip Mark Dodds 64-56, while York first teamer Gall beat York second teamer Dave Sanderson 51-39.
  • You're not paying above the odds for the car, or the insurance premium for that matter.
  • The teenage comedy arc is fully intact: geek is a geek, geek becomes popular, geek faces insurmountable odds, geek triumphs.
  • The bookies would be shortening their odds on a white Christmas. THE ONLY GAME
  • And other odds and ends: a new Space In-vader shirt, a shirt to make you a Sackboy, a glitch-pop chiptune afterparty, Fable and Mario 64 in paper, and Super Smash Bros. meets Team Fortress 2. rushkoff on May 15, 2009 7: 39 AM Boing Boing
  • This affair being settled to his satisfaction, and the night at odds with morning, he took an opportunity of imparting to the ear of this aged dulcinea a kind whisper, importing a promise of visiting her when his sister should be retired to her own chamber, and an earnest desire of leaving her door unlocked. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle
  • The moral is if these guys could do it, against all the odds, so could you.
  • Even in the face of overwhelming odds James chatted to his mammy and daddy over the five days in hospital and one of the last things he asked for was a bar of chocolate.
  • If the police chief and mayor had not been at odds in 1992, we may not have had a riot.
  • But the odds are clearly shortening. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their job was to hold on despite impossible odds , in order to give the rest of the army time to strike.
  • Football, church and country music may dominate Mississippi's off-hours, but despite the odds, this curious ballet company has thrived in the shadow of Jackson's gun shows and powerlifting contests. Religious conviction powers Ballet Magnificat, nation's first Christian ballet company
  • Do you know what the odds are against a house catching fire in the Red Triangle district of Bes Pelargic?
  • The conversation lasted maybe fifteen minutes but left the two women still at odds. Christianity Today
  • These include efforts to: present the pronouncements of the President to be inconsistent, and at odds with established ANC policy; cover matters relating to the President's pending court case in a manner that undermines the principle of presumption of innocence; suggest conflict between the President, Deputy President and Treasurer General; make various other claims about Officials being "gagged", former NEC members being targeted for "dodgy deals", and the inaccurate reporting of ANC Today
  • The lurid image this conjures up is at odds with the reality. The Times Literary Supplement
  • insuperable odds
  • She put in some clothes, odds and ends, and make-up.
  • If they are to gain promotion at the first attempt they will have done it against the odds.
  • His countenance almost cracks for a moment, but he manages to hold it together against tremendous odds.
  • Although the odds against creating such an effective organization to represent taxpaying interests seem steep, the numbers give hope.
  • They self destructed, and now a Foa is the odds on favor to win in my mind. 'Survivor: Samoa': Recapping the recap! | EW.com
  • WASHINGTON—The inspirational 1993 movie "Rudy" celebrates Daniel Ruettiger as a plucky underdog who overcomes long odds and his diminutive stature to earn a walk-on role on Notre Dame's legendary college-football team. SEC Tackles 'Rudy' in Fraud Case
  • The Kings make the Vegas oddsmakers very nervous.
  • Congress has helped make the odds by enacting measure after measure designed to keep incumbents in office.
  • Check out this article and the detailed blow-by-blow account below of how to win against all odds.
  • The mare is expected to start odds-on today and those connected with the principal opposition are under no illusions as to the task facing them.
  • God that made me, you might give a couple of brays odds to the best and most finished brayer in the world; the tone you have got is deep, your voice is well kept up as to time and pitch, and your finishing notes come thick and fast; in fact, I own myself beaten, and yield the palm to you, and give in to you in this rare accomplishment. ' Don Quixote
  • Such warfare was at odds with both Puritan theology and accepted military practices.
  • I mean really, what are the odds that our random bus, stopped at a place in Saigon – a city of 8 million people only a half a block away from our hotel? Bus to Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) – April 13
  • The odds are five to one on that horse.
  • Three runners share the overnight favoritism for the Melbourne Cup at odds ranging from 6-to - 1 to 8-to - 1.
  • Though it should be noted that neither of those votes is directly at odds with engaging in lewd conduct in a public men's rest room. Election Central | Talking Points Memo | GOP Senator Larry Craig Arrested For "Lewd Conduct" In Men's Room
  • As I explained in this article, the odds of winning the Jackpot are almost fourteen million to one.
  • Lupo said oddsmakers use theoretical win percentages to calculate the odds, as they would on a sporting event.
  • It's not clear what sort of bread Di used, but odds are it was a store-bought loaf.
  • And even though they may change temporarily we may lose seven pounds on a crash diet, odds are they will soon return to their attractor. Peter T. Coleman, PhD: The Mathematics of Middle East Conflict and Peace
  • Against all the odds, he recovered from his terrible injuries.
  • The French court's decision is at odds with rulings on similar cases in the US.
  • Nearby, the intact Surveyor 5 withstood all odds and made space history by managing to perform an alpha particle spectrogram of the soil while withstanding temperatures considerably greater than the boiling point. Weekend SkyWatcher's Forecast: March 19-21, 2010 | Universe Today
  • Today is merely the start of a difficult but worthy process undertaken against long odds.
  • It seemed, against the odds, the game would end goalless.
  • Secondly, it could plunge the country into another round of internecine fighting and, thirdly, it could put the US at odds with the UN.
  • What's more the joy of winning against insurmountable odds can do oodles to boost one's self-confidence.
  • Mine was a triumph of individuality, a personal odyssey of success, a triumph against the odds. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tonight I shall raise my glass to all those nameless individuals that against all the odds bring happiness and prosperity to this land of smiles.
  • The odds on the industry surviving in its current form are lengthening by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Racing was the chief betting sport, the newspapers carrying detailed accounts of the odds and the results.
  • Waiting for exacta, trifecta, pick three, and other complex bets hurts the dissemination of win odds information, Scherf said.
  • Backscuttling for the hop off with the odds altogether in favour of his tumbling into the river, Jaun just then I saw to collect from the gentlest weaner among the weiners, (who by this were in half droopleaflong mourning for the passing of the last post) the familiar yellow label into which he let fall a drop, smothered a curse, choked a guffaw, spat expectoratiously and blew his own trumpet. Finnegans Wake
  • The enemy, too, was confident despite the heavy odds in our favor.
  • At 75 years old, Harry was still the odds-on favorite to win the tournaments at the Obelisk.
  • They came to Portlaoise as odds-on favourites to win and had to produce the goods.
  • Most residents live in tiny apartments and pay over the odds for them too.
  • Despite the odds, they gallantly fought their way out of the trap.
  • Brendel, on the other hand, presented the piano parts in his customary bleak way, clothing the songs in an expressive straitjacket completely at odds with Goerne's fluid vocalism.
  • The two Pacific giants remain at odds on many security issues but both want to avoid a crisis on the Korean peninsula. Times, Sunday Times
  • But if a paper decides to run an article like this, the odds are that it will actually hit the streets, with punishment coming after the fact.
  • But it's not unlikely. The odds depend on the length and the rigorousness of the trip.
  • The odds of that happening are good especially since the stock is so overbought.
  • Car makers are at odds over how far the electric car revolution will go and what should power the vehicles. Times, Sunday Times
  • Furthermore, Scottish Calvinism was not an elite activity, it grew roots in the community quickly, and it nourished an egalitarian spirit that was at odds with what was, in every other respect, a deeply hierarchic society.
  • The odds of rolling a six with one die are 1 in six.
  • Betfred is giving away a free £10 Lucky 15 on the St Leger meeting at Doncaster on Saturday and will pay treble the odds for only one winner.
  • Inside information, thinks he knows more than the oddsmakers. FOLLOW THE SHARKS
  • I egged her on, and we got her into the long coat, and adjusted the broad-brimmed bonnet and veil, and I jammed the shoes on her feet, and gloved her, and stuck the gamp in her hand -- and when she managed to stand, leaning against the table, she looked as much like the outward picture of a lady as made no odds. Flash For Freedom
  • There can be few poems whose language is so at odds with its message, whose form runs so aggressively counter to its content. The Times Literary Supplement
  • I mentioned that the odds against him winning, according to Centrebet, were 46 to 1.
  • At 4.30 pm, when the referee squelched across the sodden turf, the odds seemed to be on the match being postponed because of the underfoot conditions.
  • They were offering odds of ten to one.
  • He's moved most of his stuff; there are just a few odds and ends left.
  • He worried that Paulson would want especially ugly mortgages for the CDOs, like a bettor asking a football owner to bench a star quarterback to improve the odds of his wager against the team. The Volokh Conspiracy » The SEC Split Over Goldman
  • But then her public championing of compassionate causes is largely at odds with the high-handed way she has treated those who obstruct her.
  • Roussel was one of the great individualists of the 20th century, the punchy urbanity of much of his music frequently seeming at odds with the reclusive persona he cultivated later in life.
  • Many people who play the lottery tend to forget about, or pay scant attention to, the odds of winning.
  • And even had he done so it is odds none would have heard him, for the late calm was of a sudden turned to garboil. Mistress Wilding
  • There’s little evidence they are interested in trawling the blogosphere to find weight loss technqiues or tales of plucky kiddies beating the odds. Why RSS will never “break through” « Squash
  • The problem is that their professed ideals are at odds with their lack of self-awareness.
  • Yes! gentlemen, "addressing the attentive cowboys," I can cure anything that touches the ground -- biped, quadruped, or centipede -- glanders, botts, greased hoofs, heaves, blind staggers, it makes no odds. Jim Cummings Or, The Great Adams Express Robbery
  • I thought it would be good for me to look at someone every day who was overconfident, who misjudged the odds and his own abilities, and who lost everything.
  • The gangs of feral youths that "own" the streets now know that the chances of a policeman catching them in the act of mugging a passerby are almost zero, the chances of any CCTV actually working or producing a decent image or not being used to take photos of cars parked six inches onto a yellow line or one minute into a proscribed period are also nil and even if caught the chances of being charged let alone convicted are somewhat slim and as for having to go to prison for more than six months, the odds are infinitesimal. Archive 2008-01-01
  • But Ireland have always enjoyed upsetting the odds. The Sun
  • The odds against bringing it back upstream, through the tangle of brambles and nettles and against such a flow, were minuscule. Times, Sunday Times
  • Against extraordinary odds Davie and Alan fight their way out of their ship's cabin - and in a moment of desperation Alan recklessly scuppers the ship when he ignites a barrel of gunpowder in the hold.

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