potentially - with a possibility of becoming actual; "he is potentially dangerous"; "potentially useful"
1. Capable of being but not yet in existence; latent: a potential problem.
2. Having possibility, capability, or power.
3. Grammar Of, relating to, or being a verbal construction with auxiliaries such as may or can; for example, it may snow.
Doctors are excited about the new drug's potential benefits
She has good potential.
There is a lot of potential in this room.
She has the potential to do very well in her new job.
how to use inexplicable in three sentence's
This is a sentence. A prisoner has to serve the sentence the judge gives him.
If you said "use coincidence in a sentence" you already know how to use it in a sentence and are probably getting examples. if you said" how do you use coincidence in a sentence" you most-likely don't know the definition of it.
This sentence is about nothing.
there is lot of potential energy in sun. We are not using it full.
a majority of expenses have been dedeucted
The inventor displayed his prototype to the potential buyers.
elastic potential energy is stored by the forces within a disorted elastic object
If you meant 'potential'... The potential that any person will commit a crime is defined by their state of mind. Petrol has the potential to spontaneously combust.
The potential Olympian hurtled down the hill at breakneck speed on his luge.
You have the potential to do great things.
In the sentence your son has potential, potential is a noun.
Kinetic energy is a term used in physics. A ball has Kenetic (potential) energy.
When meeting a potential employer for the first time it is a good idea to give him or her a firm handshake.
In hydroelectric power station we use the potential energy of water to generate electricity.
To show the potential of this, I answered your question.