Example sentences of "of [noun sg] [prep] so far [conj] " in BNC.

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1 In their view this had hopelessly inhibited the quest for the causes of crime in the case of classical criminology , and diverted attention away from social defence in the case of the neoclassicists ( since the latter were only interested in ‘ determinants ’ of crime in so far as they reduced the offender 's responsibility ) .
2 Reports of Parliamentary proceedings are protected by the ordinary law of defamation in so far as they are fair and accurate unless the defamed person can prove malice .
3 As for the residence requirement , despite the fact that it applied in the same way to British nationals , it constituted covert discrimination on grounds of nationality in so far as , by the very nature of things , nationals of other member states were less likely to be ‘ resident ’ in the United Kingdom than British citizens .
4 In any event , residence of some kind was the hallmark of establishment in so far as establishment involved economic integration in the host member state of a kind that was greater than that which arose from the provision of a cross-border service .
5 Hinshaw makes a distinction between the ‘ cognitive ’ and ‘ evocative ’ contents of knowledge suggesting that the ‘ truth ’ , at the semantic and syntactic levels , can be considered in isolation from the social basis of knowledge in so far as it can be shown to be cognitive rather than evocative .
6 Mundanity is a variety of realism in so far as familiar and recurrent experiences are those which the mind most readily conceives of as " real " .
7 3.7 The expression " pain and suffering " is almost a term of art in so far as the expression embraces different concepts .
8 Grammatology is the ‘ science ’ of writing in so far as writing is regarded as a generalized phenomenon , as archi-écriture .
9 Schegloff has made studies of the rules of conversation in so far as they govern who speaks when , and how we know when it is our turn to speak .
10 In one condition of their experiment nonsense sequences followed a structural pattern of English in so far as replacing the nonsense stems by English stems would have resulted in a grammatically correct sequence .
11 In reviewing the central site , consideration has been given primarily to the needs of History and of English in so far as the needs of the latter can not be satisfied on the St Cross site .
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