词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_likely-and-unlikely |
语种 | 英语、汉语、英汉翻译、汉英翻译 |
释义 | Likely and unlikelyLikely and unlikely are adjectives. We use them to say that something will probably happen or not happen in the future. We can use them before a noun, or with the verbs be, seem and appear:
We can follow likely or unlikely by a verb in the to-infinitive form:
Instead of unlikely, we can say not likely:
We can also follow likely and unlikely by a that-clause with will. This pattern is less common than likely/unlikely + to-infinitive:
We can use adverbs such as very, quite, highly and extremely before likely and unlikely to make their meaning stronger:
We can compare how probable different things are using likely and unlikely with as … as, more, (the) most, less and (the) least:
In American English, and more and more in British English, likely is used as a mid-position adverb (like probably in British English), most commonly between will and a main verb:
Typical errorIt is likely to does not mean the same as it is easy to:
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