Your theory has plausibility, but we need to test it.
It is quite plausible you can
Her story sounded completely plausible.
We considered Detective Martin's theory, but in the end it was just not plausible. The weather report indicated that a severe tornado was highly plausible for a neighboring county.
I'm sorry, but that is not a plausible request.
"He considered the sudden passage of the cold front to be the most plausible explanation for the major drop-off in fishing luck." "It is plausible to assume the US will remain in a recession for the rest of this year."
His argument was plausible, but in the end it turned out to be false.
His explanation was interesting but it wasn't really plausible.
If you mean "use the word 'plausible' in a sentience" there here you:Dad: Do you want to go skiing today?Son: I'm feeling kind of sick, but ill rest a little then ill decideDad: OK, let me know if its a plausible decision
Specious is used to describe something that sounds true or plausible but is not: The Area 51 theorists use some very specious arguments to validate their assumptions.
Specious means "misleading in appearance, or something that may seem plausible at first but isn't true or accurate." Following is a use of "specious" in sentence: "The thief had a specious argument, and soon people realized he was the guilty party."
I can, but your teacher probably isn't going to like it. Or may like it quite a bit, but still won't give you a good grade for it: "Plausable" is a plausible, but incorrect, spelling of the word "plausible."
A synonym for plausible is possible.
The specious argument at first appears plausible but proves to be the purest piffle.OrJoe: Dad says fishing gets him back to nature.Flo: Piffle. He wouldn't know the old gal if she knocked him down and sat on him.