Example sentences of "[verb] [art] [noun] [verb] so [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The problem for capitalism , however , was that in allowing the state to intervene so extensively , economic crises had become internalised within the state , and this undermined the states legitimacy .
2 If Jagdish Mehra and Helmut Rechenburg succeed in maintaining the standard set so far , the result will be one of the most significant scientific works ever published , a series well eligible for inclusion in any time capsule of the 20th century .
3 It could only be some quality in the stillness of the air which made the voice carry so beautifully .
4 I hope that , given the work done so far to design and cost the scheme , you can have tenders to hand by then on the basis that construction would begin on site very soon after a decision at that meeting .
5 Nearly 30 millimetres of rain was recorded.Flood warnings had been issued … but no-one expected the river to rise so quickly … surging 10 feet above normal levels .
6 We were pleased to see the Canadians do so well in the World Cup after they had beaten us over there ’ !
7 A second line of argument is to see the picture painted so far as too static .
8 At a time of so much egocentric materialism it 's refreshing to see the NI fighting so effectively for imaginative humanitarianism . "
9 The terms of section 40 seem to me strongly to support the conclusions reached so far .
10 Erm , we would n't want the policy to progress so far erm as to get to the stage of looking for a specific site and for us to pull the rug underneath the County , and for other authorities to pull the rug from underneath the County at that stage , erm to answer to Mr Heselton 's specific question , of course we would n't object to a new settlement er in Selby , but erm it does n't erm it does n't detract from our objection to erm the principle of the policy , the way the policy 's expressed .
11 Thanks also to everyone who helped the kitchen to do so well .
12 They had not expected the newcomer to speak so soon .
13 He told police he had not expected the fires to spread so quickly , and blamed hot summer weather .
14 It limits people 's ability to pursue some conceptions of the good , but only in order to equalize the opportunity to do so overall .
15 Our efforts to meet the company have so far been unsuccessful , but as far as we understand from the AEU ( which has a single union agreement with Montupet ) , there are no special mechanisms to target recruitment and training on the unemployed and it is worth bearing in mind that the code of practice of the new Fair Employment Act puts the idea of the merit principle above that of equality of outcome or the achievement of social justice .
16 What effort has the Minister made so far ?
17 Efforts to secure a ceasefire have so far failed to halt the clashes , which began when Serb nationalists launched an offensive to carve out a separate state which would be attached to a truncated Yugoslavia after Bosnia won international recognition .
18 The mourners lamented a life taken so quickly in a violent and senseless manner .
19 She was pulled upwards with startling velocity , the sensation of flying through the air causing the world to tilt so precariously that she found herself clinging to fitzAlan like a drowning woman .
20 I have not seen the house look so well since Sir John 's time . ’
21 And she had never seen the jeep travel so quickly .
22 I welcome the moves made so far by my right hon. Friend to encourage manufacturers to make cars more defensible .
23 I have never seen a church empty so quickly . )
24 I 've never seen a Saturday go so fast .
25 So much for one reason why William Charles had had the wherewithal to prosper so quickly in his new surroundings ; but there was another , just as vital to his continuing success — he had made a prudent marriage .
26 But others say that this definition of rape will undermine the progress made so far in getting the courts to take rape seriously .
27 We all know that there are crimes for which the penalties go up to life imprisonment , but that does not seem to cover the point raised so eloquently by my hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow , Shettleston ( Mr. Marshall ) .
28 The edition for 1605 , no longer extant , was said to have foretold the Gunpowder Plot so accurately that it brought him under suspicion of complicity .
29 TODAY has been told the letter went so far as to claim she had betrayed her husband , her sons and , above all , the Queen .
30 The clearest way to focus the questions raised so far is by posing the level-of-analysis problem with more care .
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