Example sentences of "whole [noun] so [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The fundamental term was therefore " something which underlines the whole contract so that , if it is not complied with , the performance becomes something totally different from that which the contract contemplates " ( Devlin J in Smeaton Hanscomb & Co v Sassoon I Setty & Son & Co [ 1953 ] 1 WLR 1468 ) .
2 The immediate task was then to get a secure temporary roof across the whole building so that the interior could begin to dry out in the spring .
3 It also involves rescheduling the whole programme so that decisions on commitments to production can be deferred until nineteen ninety five , with first deliveries to United Kingdom and Italy occurring in the year two thousand and to er Spain and Germany in two thousand and two .
4 We must plan the emotive path of the whole work so that tranquil periods and emotive peaks find their right places .
5 It is particularly useful if you tape-record the whole session so that you can hear your performance yourself .
6 Or without extending the whole process so that it takes nearly a year to change anything ?
7 And after she had succeeded in doing it once , Sylvia began to reverse the whole process so that those signs of panic would never appear again .
8 Holism , however , involves treating the whole person so that , hopefully , the underlying condition which brings about the symptom can be dealt with .
9 This policy , especially useful for those who plan to stay together , such as couples or blood-related buyers , covers the whole amount so that if either of you die , the whole mortgage is paid off in full .
10 And during this time I am on the monitor studying the whole thing so that we can make our plans and adjustments for our filming with the real orchestra .
11 If in the peg and socket arrangement the true priorities were the alignment and the contact then we might redesigns the whole thing so that it looked something like the drawing shown here .
12 Both groups follow Foucault to the extent that they neither propose , nor utilize , a general theory of history as such ; but unlike Foucault they simply tend to shelve the whole problem so as to avoid its theoretical difficulties .
13 And when the stars ' faces filled the whole screen so that you saw their huge lips close up like big pillows moving and their great teeth and their smooth matt skin filling the whole screen , it was frightening .
14 Try a recording in which the camera looks at the class the whole time so that it gives you the teacher's-eye view .
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