Example sentences of "[noun] [pers pn] have [verb] so [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The only coverage I 've seen so far is erm is the news and ten of all things .
2 The part of the course I 've enjoyed so far is n't the Face the Media stuff
3 I recall how disappointed I was in the morning to discover that the pebbles I had collected so lovingly the evening before were just a pile of dull stones now that they had dried and were away from the beach .
4 All the goals I 'd met so far — O-levels , A-levels , university — had been pre-planned for me .
5 My local art shop had no idea and none of the books I have read so far give any advice .
6 They will even try to understand the words I have spent so long in writing .
7 enable your opponent to abandon a commitment by : describing all the concessions you have made so far suggesting that the circumstances have changed blaming some other party or situation for the present position , such as the government , another union , the economy , the personnel department suggesting that somehow there has been a misunderstanding referring the whole matter to another individual or group .
8 It 'll be able to remind you of all the wonderful speeches you 've made so far .
9 As Einstein expressed it : ‘ The world that we have made at the level of thinking we have done so far , creates problems we can not solve at the same level of thinking ’ .
10 In such circumstances we may not describe a band as being due to a single local mode , and the empirical methods we have used so far break down .
11 This is thus the most nearly recognizable of all the Pacifics we have considered so far .
12 Because of the Swamp they had come so far south that they must now be at least on a level with the path where they had fought with the sturdy beggars although the northern ride must lie between them and it .
13 Brock are two others whose names are becoming increasingly linked with the authors they have illustrated so admirably , and their work will make a sound investment .
14 If theorists attempted this task it is likely that they would find themselves following in the footsteps of the more deterministic elements of Durkheim 's sociology , which have not the aspects they have favoured so far ( Deutscher , 1984 ; Farr , 1984 ) .
15 Abandoning the isolation he had sought so avidly in September , he went back so as to be at home for Christmas , always a precarious time for him .
16 McMaster moved from the seaside to take up a new teaching post in Drumahoe near Londonderry last week , and decided to make the break with the club he has served so well for a decade .
17 Yet though she knew she 'd been a fool and totally lacking in self-control , still tangled in the sensual web he 'd spun so effortlessly , she could n't regret it .
18 The only English phrases I have learned so far are : " You have a beautiful figure " …
19 As she lost the thread entirely , all thought of telling him the work she had done so far went out of her head .
20 It was a way of gaining Veronica 's confidence , Loretta thought , launching into a description of the work she 'd done so far .
21 It was past midnight , so this was the start of Sunday , and Sundays in Taiwan were not going to bear much resemblance to Sundays in the countries she had known so far .
22 No wonder she 'd struggled so hard against it , doing all in her power to keep him at a distance .
23 ‘ Susan will be sorry to have missed you — it 's a pity you have to leave so soon , ’ Richard said hesitantly ushering Simon out of his office , and his life , forever .
24 Alan Strachan seemed genuinely pleased with the work we 'd done so far .
25 The sticky price models we have considered so far tend merely to ‘ tack on ’ the assumption of sticky prices to the sort of model developed in chapter 4 .
26 In terms of the analogies we have used so far , the Indian traditions are said to orbit around a different sun , or to be climbing a different mountain — or to identify with a family of monsters in the loch quite different from the one followed by the Near Eastern religions .
27 In those few minutes she 'd simply been reacting to the mood he 'd created so skilfully .
28 His pupils were developing minds of their own , behaving out of character , no longer the dull but devoted group of enthusiasts he had taught so constructively for six months .
29 He repeated the phrases he had heard so often on TV but Ralph sneered .
30 But , to her relief , the voice that greeted her from the other side of the oak door , though indistinct , was that of the porter she had met so briefly the evening before .
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