@Sam, "... and I guess we don't all speak like logicians" yeah; in everyday situations we need not to [Mr. Wittgenstein will disagree]. Though it's not rare that a different interpretation of a single word [often in a religious scriptures] has given birth a whole school of thought or ideology. Mr. Wittgenstein might have a point after all.
@Jon, so are those common phrases, strictly speaking, wrong but still common? If they are wrong, then I guess there must be a [very?] good reason why they've found their way into the common use.
@John, "... certainty has grades and is not absolute on its own" that was my main doubt. I, for some reason, compared it to "dead". We can't say "a bit dead" or "more dead", and so must the case be with "certain". Is there a specific grammatical-linguistic term for these "either is or not" adjectives like "dead"?
@ Amanda, yeah; so thought I but then, certainty is [per definition?] "100% probability". I guess my premise is false.