Example sentences of "so [adv] [conj] [pron] [verb] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 She disliked the wretched man so intensely that she did n't care if she never had to see him again .
2 So presumably if they do n't get bids for those routes then they they ca n't do anything about it .
3 So rather than you going well on this nice question , and you could you could have done it and picked up
4 How could she spend Roman 's money so lavishly when she had just parted from her lover ?
5 The converter had worked so effectively that he suffered only mild carbon monoxide poisoning .
6 But the plains , savannahs , rivers and hills , all the way from Samburu down to the Masai Steppe , proved fruitful and the Masai built up their strength through the acquisition of women and cattle so successfully that they chased out the other tribes who were obliged to cling to the mountains or secrete themselves in the forests , land useless for cattle .
7 She wanted to see him so badly that she felt physically bereft .
8 In captivity , a good memory and fear will destroy the horse if it is handled so badly that it becomes permanently anxious .
9 His backsliding into sloth had happened so slowly that he had n't been aware of it .
10 on so in and you do n't even need to notify the Paymaster General or you do n't have to notify anybody employment outside the teaching area altogether .
11 When he moved abruptly to cover her , to force a place for himself on top of her , levering her legs wider to open her body to him , his coarse , muscled weight was a blissful assuagement of hunger , a hunger burning through her so fiercely that she felt almost faint …
12 He stood at the bottom of the steps and looked up at her so fiercely that she stopped halfway down and felt quite uneasy , wondering exactly what she had done wrong .
13 He loved theatre so much that he became very angry if it were bad .
14 ‘ You liked me so much that you walked out on me ! ’
15 It 's because you loved your husband so much that you feel so much .
16 It just says that we have to make the the call for nominations so long before we put out the selection ballot .
17 It 's been a long time since you left us , but you 're more than welcome though on your return and do n't be so long before you come again .
18 I count it a double honour to represent Framlingham this afternoon and to offer you a welcome back , a welcome into our homes which we look forward to seeing you on Saturday and we are so thrilled to think that so many of you have made the journey back to visit us and I echo the sentiments of another speaker , do n't let it be so long before you come again .
19 somehow in the drama , even though it 's so long since he passed away .
20 ‘ We would not have stayed with this product so long if we did not believe there was potential to make at least £20 million annual profit from it , ’ Shaw says .
21 Temperature requirements are not too critical either , so long as they fall somewhere in the range of 20–28°C .
22 Two people lingered , fingering the scarves , and she put her head down , feigning ignorance , or ineptitude , or just plain stupidity — whatever , so long as they went away without asking her the price of anything !
23 Only later was this amended to allow the return of Yugoslavs home so long as they went willingly .
24 Seeing that the independents would be slowly strangled so long as they relied exclusively upon the British circuits , he sought to establish connections to Hollywood .
25 It is , however , often claimed that there is a qualified obligation to obey the law , based on the authority of governments in just regimes , for so long as they remain just .
26 Most of them arose as a result of an all-Russian phenomenon in 1922 — the lack of co-ordination and exchange of information between the centre and the localities , together with nonchalant neglect of provincial problems so long as they did not affect central political issues .
27 Even among senior players , outside pursuits were tolerated only so long as they did not affect a player 's performance or make football of secondary importance to him .
28 He could make concessions to his allies and all would be well so long as they did not come into conflict with one another .
29 To do otherwise would be to break the long-established political tradition of allowing people to hold whatever views they liked , so long as they did not break the law or urge others to do so .
30 Nevertheless , so long as they did not organise — and sometimes even when they did — the workers themselves provided their employers with a solution to the problem of labour management : by and large they liked to work , and their expectations were remarkably modest .
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