Example sentences of "[pron] is so [adj] [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Labour has to create a state system which is so good that no one will want to send their children anywhere else . ’
2 There are a number of modelling programs suitable for use on microcomputers at a price which is so low that a complete system often costs less than the terminals used merely to communicate with larger computers .
3 The word itself is so value-loaded that no judgement on whether contemporary trends in rural society have or have not brought about a ‘ loss of community ’ in the English village is realistically possible .
4 One of the major criticisms of the battery cage has been that it is so small that the hens have no room to move or to perform their natural behaviour patterns .
5 The second meaning may be termed the ‘ substantive sense ’ of unreasonableness : a decision may be attacked if it is so unreasonable that no reasonable public body could have made it .
6 Indeed it is so severe that the fabric of the economy is beginning to suffer long-term damage .
7 Difficult not to take the weather personally and on this day , when it is so important that the sun shines , I think of Camus 's return to Tipasa , ‘ walking through the lonely and rain-soaked countryside ’ , trying to find that strength ‘ which helps me to accept what exists once I have recognized that I can not change it ’ .
8 It is so important that the person nearest to the patient should have the right to prescribe that I am sure the measure will receive all-party support .
9 This is why it is so vital that the EC 's half-hearted plans to deregulate its airlines after 1992 should be strengthened , not diluted .
10 In such cases it is easy to make a correct recovery because it is so obvious that the glider is stalled .
11 Which which is why really at that th for the development funding they did the did n't particularly want I I P supporting because it is so structured and a lot of it is on a plate in a sense .
12 In order to support this position , one has to accept : ( i ) that the intention — recklessness distinction is the most significant dividing line for serious injuries , more relevant than factors such as premeditation or provocation ; ( ii ) that this is a workable distinction for the courts , especially in impulsive crimes , where the definition of intention may be fulfilled by a momentary realization of what is happening ; ( iii ) that it is so significant that a difference in maximum penalties between life imprisonment and five years ' imprisonment is appropriate ; and ( iv ) that there is not a strong case for phrasing the offences in terms of endangerment rather than of causing physical harm .
13 Stuttgart coach Christophe Daum had named Chapman as his side 's biggest worry after the pre-season Makita tournament at Elland Road , saying : ‘ He is so dangerous when the ball is played into him in the air , and I do n't think we are able to cope with that . ’
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