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Vladv Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

The odds were no more than even

The odds for a successful joint attack by Russia and France to force Germany were no more than even, in his opinion, but when the "inevitable" war between Germany on one side and England and the United States on the other over markets and colonies broke out, it would be possible to compel Germany to return the two provinces.

What does the expression the odds were no more than even mean? Thanks

  

Top answer

Vladv What does the expression the odds were no more than even mean? When the odds are even, you have a 50% chance of success. When the odds are no more than even, they cannot exceed 50%, but they may be any number less than that.

  • Vladv What does the expression the odds were no more than even mean?
  • When the odds are even, you have a 50% chance of success.
  • When the odds are no more than even, they cannot exceed 50%, but they may be any number less than that.
  • But the expression is not a mathematical one.
  • All it means is that the chances of success were not very good.
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1 Answers
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VladvWhat does the expression the odds were no more than even mean?

When the odds are even, you have a 50% chance of success. When the odds are no more than even, they cannot exceed 50%, but they may be any number less than that. But the expression is not a mathematical one. All it means is that the chances of success were not very good.

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