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

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1 Sometimes people are in so much of a hurry they run .
2 One basic trouble with Medea is the mediocre quality of invention in so much of Cherubini 's score .
3 One basic trouble with Medea is the mediocre quality of invention in so much of Cherubini 's score .
4 TWO TURKS who sold kidneys for transplants in London were in so much pain when they were discharged that one had to carry the other out of the hospital , the General Medical Council 's disciplinary committee heard yesterday .
5 No doubt there is too much red tape and lawyering in the nuclear business — as in so much of American life .
6 I wish she had n't sounded quite so bored , nor in so much of a hurry .
7 The changes proposed by these authors in so much as they relate to the agriculture/nature conservation conflict in the UK uplands are summarised below .
8 ‘ It would be extremely sad to see this railway go to the wall , after so many volunteers have put in so much time and money to keep steam travel alive in Hampshire . ’
9 But nevertheless , at that stage in your career , the tendency is to be in so much of a hurry , that if the opportunities present themselves , it all seems quite logical in a way .
10 The LDDC is sometimes cited as a success story because it has attracted in so much private investment .
11 If they had agreed a price the deal would have gone through just as SMS found itself in so much trouble with Volvo [ SMS was forced to resign the $40m Volvo account in early 1991 , after it was discovered the agency was rigging performance advertisements ] .
12 Next time my instinct for a holiday , as it does in so much else , cries for something hot and cheap , I shall stay my hand .
13 In religion as in so much else the daily life of the South Saxons was conducted over several centuries by word of mouth and the group memory rather than by letter and record .
14 As in so much of eighteenth-century Sussex local patterns depended on the experiences of one family , yet overall the role of the aristocracy and gentry remained more or less unquestioned .
15 Stand up for your rights , Aries , but do n't dig your toes in so much that you create more problems for yourself .
16 As in so much else , the ‘ Omagiu ’ in the National History Museum and its lesser imitators in every other museum and exhibition hall in the country , were Stalinist in inspiration .
17 The displays of china and silver-framed photographs and the arrangements of feathers and dried flowers would have made the atmosphere claustrophobic if the immense windows had not let in so much light .
18 We were involved in so much .
19 ‘ Now there is a possibility he could miss the entire season and I feel very sorry for him because he 's put in so much hard work . ’
20 Businessman Ravi was in so much pain he cancelled his booking on the doomed airbus — which crashed in the Himalayas killing 113 people .
21 Lorry driver Bill , 51 , of Merthyr Tydfil , South Wales , said yesterday : ‘ I was in so much pain I could n't dress myself after I had been examined and needed a wheelchair . ’
22 He was wrapped in so much of the duvet all she could see was the top of his head .
23 Why is it then that these halls have been recalled with so much pleasure in so much twentieth-century writing ?
24 The Louver Gallery has this month cleverly devised a show which overviews this underlying notion in so much recent painting .
25 ‘ Although Stanford had met Brahms , it was quite likely that Mühlfeld was n't keen to play the concerto because of its derivative aspects — there is still that unique Irish/Gallic quality in so much of the writing .
26 It is for this reason that in so much of the literature and documentation dealing with the justification of a war emphasis was placed upon the enemy as a rebel who must be punished for his acts of infidelity or treason .
27 When you look at the dazzling display of art work and fine printing done in so much consumer literature today , you will get some idea of the high standards required in public relations .
28 The reason for doing this should now be a little clearer : although democracy has often been equated with a system of government , or recently even more narrowly with a method of choosing a government , too much stress on government diverts attention from one of the most constant aspirations behind the idea of democracy — the desire to bridge , or even to abolish , the gap between government and the governed , state and society , which is taken for granted in so much conventional political thinking .
29 Secondly , given this definition , why in so much discussion of deindustrialization is the emphasis placed on manufacturing ?
30 It was therefore the extreme claims of the clerical right that forced the issue : these claims were incompatible with the minimum demands of the liberal state even when these represented , as in so much else , the continuation of the work of the monarchy .
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