Example sentences of "[adv] far [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 She was so far gone that Joey had to help her walk across the field to where he had parked .
2 All the models of passive rifting discussed so far assume that rifting is more or less a symmetric process ; that is , we would expect the opposing passive margins formed through continental break-up to have a similar structure and morphology because they have experienced a similar tectonic history .
3 We have so far assumed that the micro-instructions are held in a read-only control store , although we have considered the possibility of interchangeable plug-in control stores .
4 We have so far assumed that it is a word form associated with a single sense , and that a difference of word form entails a difference of lexical unit .
5 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 .
6 August Weismann was utterly opposed to Lamarckism and Weismann 's opinions so far prevailed that A. D. Darbishire in his authoritative Breeding and the Mendelian Discovery ( London , 1911 ) put the matter thus .
7 The private group , which insures invoices and financing arrangements , recorded 1,220 falures in the first half of this year , but indications so far show that at least 2,000 more failures will be recorded by the end of the year .
8 The greenbelts have so far ensured that towns and cities do not sprawl into one another .
9 ‘ Within these criteria I have so far ensured that buildings have not suffered closure , but in the future this may not be possible owing to the shrinking budget , ’ said Mr Eyton Jones .
10 No wins so far mean that Amthaal slips in the race on 7st 12lb and he showed plenty of promise at Chester last week — racing for the first time in five months .
11 The results presented so far imply that the information acquired during non-reinforced exposure to a stimulus , like that acquired as a consequence of other conditioning procedures , requires the presence of appropriate contextual cues if it is to be fully retrieved .
12 Most of the examples discussed so far imply that transfers of money are gifts rather than loans , although the distinction between these two is not always clear .
13 So far fears that West Germany will be too distracted by the rebuilding of East Germany to continue the building of the European Community have been exaggerated .
14 Genette 's discussion of Proust is so far reaching that his book can be regarded as much as a reading of A la recherche as a contribution to narrative theory , and to this extent it represents a challenge to the generic distinctions normally made in structuralist thinking between poetics and criticism .
15 Research on the development of various types of psychiatric disorder has so far suggested that close relationships tend to play the most crucial role in increasing or decreasing vulnerability .
16 Economic reform has so far meant that Poles can gaze in wonderment at now well-stocked meat stalls they have no money to buy from .
17 The results so far suggest that although meters are expensive to install they do lead to a drop in consumption .
18 The results obtained so far suggest that shape-specific long-chain water polymers could be the something which produces the physiological and pharmacological effects which homoeopathic potencies exert on living systems .
19 The measurements so far suggest that this will be far too ambitious .
20 The results so far suggest that those informants who described themselves as infrequent and inexperienced readers of SF would not regard this as SF at all ; whereas those informants who did read SF would characterise it as such .
21 Our discussion so far implies that many animals are lay physicists , that they have implicit knowledge of real-world properties ( such as the optics of 3-D objects viewed in air or water ) that can be explicitly described by professional physicists .
22 Although one would dearly like more supportive evidence , what we have so far indicates that isolated experiences rarely if ever leave permanent traces — however traumatic and however early they may be .
23 However , the evidence so far suggests that it is not enough to persuade businesspeople that rates will really be fixed forever .
24 The evidence so far suggests that the interviewers will fail .
25 In fact , experience so far suggests that MDC 's approach to urban regeneration has been less cavalier than LDDC 's , reflecting its concern to minimise the social costs of development to its residents and to avoid projects likely to prejudice other areas of the city .
26 The fact that certain strategies which can be shown to be useful in translation have not been made use of so far suggests that translators are simply not aware of them , rather than that they are familiar with them but consciously or subconsciously choose not to use them .
27 However , the experience in New South Wales so far suggests that sentences under the new dispensation are certainly no lower than they were under the old regime .
28 The model developed so far suggests that only random movements in aggregate demand will cause real aggregate output to deviate from its natural or normal level .
29 All the scientific evidence collected so far suggests that biotechnology is really very safe .
30 However , the evidence so far suggests that bats are using the technique , not to distinguish an echo from the original sound that produced it , but for the more subtle task of distinguishing echoes from other echoes .
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