Example sentences of "[det] [conj] so " in BNC.

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1 That or so er suffering form senile dementia or loss your memory , that you ca n't remember who you ought to have in mind .
2 The Labour Party knows this and so do the Liberals ( now Democrats ) with their emphasis on community politics .
3 The clear message behind this and so much more of national policy at present is that teachers can not be trusted .
4 I was intrigued by this and so he went to the store room and eventually returned with a pile of prints .
5 Light did not seem to do this and so , according to Newton and many others , must be made of particles ( because two light particles could never add up to give zero , or darkness ) .
6 Pine-scented products may do this and so are best avoided for this reason .
7 The Royal Family has thus judiciously assented to this and so has participated in the creation of its own image ; in the process , it has ensured that the monarchy , as an institution and as a symbol , retains a cultural past , present , and ( crucially ) future .
8 So important was this and so adept the participants that the farmers-general and the Van Necks were able to persuade both the French and British governments to permit the continued shipment of British tobacco to France during the wars of 1744–8 and 1756–63 .
9 To do some other tasks , you do this , this , this , this and this and so on .
10 She had n't told Tom this and so he was surprised to see her packing a suitcase full of clothes .
11 ‘ I am working hard to try and build on this and so far we have about 16 corporate members .
12 Yes , but I would have thought that you know I M R O sh should of then I asked , I write and asked them the question , I r really would have expected a reply to come back , yes , we found this and so and so , but we then scraped a little bit further and erm .
13 Watching every movement , and she put him on and put his blanket on the ground and he was laying there in his handful of this and so she said come to me then and she put something on the floor she said well you know you go to it , I ai n't gon na give it to you and he 's she said well no , you 've got ta try !
14 so that gives us this and so if I said erm and that 's a all right we 'll leave that as twelve X squared minus one .
15 I handled some and so did Mueller .
16 This passage sheds much light on the method of ‘ Mr. Eliot 's Sunday Morning Service ’ where the self-mutilation of ‘ enervate Origen ’ is placed in the same lineage as the sexual origin of ‘ the Word ’ , and where the initial ‘ sapient sutlers of the Lord ’ who ‘ Drift across the window-panes ’ is a passage with an ambiguous , or better ambivalent , reference , since it holds together in one term both the ‘ sable presbyters ’ who bring offerings to church and ‘ the bees ’ who bring pollen from one part of the plant to another and so perform the ‘ Blest office of the epicene ’ .
17 In a formal group this means ensuring that people stick to the procedures , do n't argue , do n't interrupt one another and so on .
18 It is interesting how often people get locked into a disagreeing ‘ spiral ’ where one disagreement breeds another which , in turn , breeds another and so on .
19 The results are greeted by wild applause as one act is toppled from the lead by another and so on .
20 But more generally , if we use superordinate norms as our main reference point , we can not explain why , despite superordinate pressures towards uniformity , varieties of English and other languages can still remain so astonishingly divergent from one another and so variable within themselves .
21 Items abandoned and not owned by anyone no longer belong to another and so can not be stolen .
22 References to the senior members from whom we learned were many and it is interesting that several who felt grateful for the quality of the intellectual challenge offered also , in retrospect , appreciated the problems of College and University in maintaining this when so many dons , male and female , had gone .
23 Well I would n't be here because a horse was used for a toxin to provide the anti-toxin for diphtheria whe , in my days when I was younger there was no toxins as such , vaccination as such and so therefore the horses were used for research to provide the anti-toxins .
24 The 1959 Act ( s.32 ) enabled a licensing court to grant licences for the sale of alcoholic liquor to " such and so many persons as the court shall think fit . "
25 He saw so much and so keenly , his vision enhanced by his occulobe .
26 In fact she talked so much and so often about it that I feel I have been there myself . ’
27 Perhaps it is not surprising , because those demands change so much and so often .
28 It is to the credit of these players ( and to William MacIlwraith 's also ) that I do not recall ever having laughed so much and so heartily at a play that I liked so little . ’
29 I conclude that they have done so much and so well they will find it hard to let go those duties .
30 For it is a prime fact about classical Macedon , and one that explains why so large and rich a country counted for so little until so late , that she was a frontier province of the Greek world ; beyond lay Illyrians , Dardanians and Thracians , and beyond them the drifting pre-Celtic populations of central Europe , undisciplined fighters but unlimited in manpower .
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