highly probable - meaning and definition. What is highly probable
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What (who) is highly probable - definition

Probable Maximum Loss

Highly hazardous chemical         
HAZARD RATING BY THE US OSHA
Highly Hazardous Chemical; Highly Hazardous Chemicals
A highly hazardous chemical is a substance classified by the American Occupational Safety and Health Administration as material that is both toxic and reactive and whose potential for human injury is high if released. Highly hazardous chemicals may cause cancer, birth defects, induce genetic damage, cause miscarriage, injury and death from relatively small exposures.
Probable error         
In statistics, probable error defines the half-range of an interval about a central point for the distribution, such that half of the values from the distribution will lie within the interval and half outside.Dodge, Y.
Probable cause         
  • Officer training a drug dog
  • The first page of the [[Constitution of the United States]]
LEGAL CONCEPT IN US LAW
Probable Cause; Probably cause
In United States criminal law, probable cause is the standard by which police authorities have reason to obtain a warrant for the arrest of a suspected criminal or the issuing of a search warrant. There is no universally accepted definition or formulation for probable cause.

Wikipedia

Probable maximum loss

Probable maximum loss (PML) is a term used in the insurance industry as well as commercial real estate. Although the definition is not consistent in the insurance industry, it is generally defined as the value of the largest loss that could result from a disaster, assuming the normal functioning of passive protective features (e.g. firewalls, nonflammable materials, flood defences etc.) and proper functioning of most (perhaps not all) active suppression systems (e.g. sprinklers). This loss estimate is always less than (or in rare cases, equal to) the maximum foreseeable loss, which assumes the failure of all active protective features. Underwriting decisions can be influenced by PML evaluations, and the amount of reinsurance ceded on a risk can be predicated on the PML valuation.

PML estimation is also used to determine the extent of losses in Chemical & Petrochemical Industries. Insurers and Reinsurers across the world use PML to estimate loss during events such as vapour cloud explosions (VCE) or high pressure rupture (HPR).

Examples of use of highly probable
1. In 1'0', scientists declared it "highly probable" that the remains were those of Joan of Arc.
2. "I believe that it is highly probable that these men will try to leave the country.
3. The three officials agreed it is highly probable that H5N1 could be found in the United States in 2006.
4. Detective Superintendent Andy Brennan said it was "highly probable" that the two men were trying to leave the country.
5. The foreign secretary said Thursday that it was "highly probable" that Iran will be referred to the U.N.