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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Masud Hoghughi , director of Aycliffe children 's centre , said : ‘ It is most regrettable that so long after the Children Act this ambiguity continues .
2 And in the depths of the forest , the humming is still strong , and the wind is still swirling all about us , and something is stirring , something that is so strong and so purely magical that no one has ever been able to resist it …
3 For example ‘ Lord Of The Flies ’ on symbolism , no other book I have read is so well and so believably put together with everything fitting together perfectly .
4 Speech processing is so complex and so little understood that we want as few assumptions built into the development architecture as possible .
5 This is not so difficult in the tropical rainforest where the rainfall is so heavy and so well spread throughout the year that the centres of many plants are permanently filled with water .
6 Perhaps in this case the injunction can be ignored since the pattern is so widespread and so instinctively attractive .
7 The spacing of such steps on pointe is so minute and so fast that it is not possible to see the change of feet as one succeeds the other .
8 One publisher requires that authors warrant that the article does not infringe any copyright , trademark or patent , that is not libellous and so on ( matters that are beyond the competence of the author to judge ) and the author is required to indemnify the publishers ‘ against any costs expenses , or damages which [ the publisher ] may incur or for which [ the publisher ] may become liable as a result of any breach of these warranties ’ .
9 If in any given case the land in dispute is unbuilt land and the squatter is aware that the owner , while having no present use for it , has a purpose in mind for its use in the future , the court is likely to require very clear evidence before it can be satisfied that the squatter who claims a possessory title has not only established factual possession of the land , but also the requisite intention to exclude the world at large , including the owner with the paper title , so far as is reasonably practicable and so far as the processes of the law will allow .
10 As to this , counsel for the council accepted the correctness of the following statement ( so far as it went ) which I made in Powell v McFarlane ( at 471 – 2 ) : " … the animus possidendi involves the intention , in one 's own name and on one 's own behalf to exclude the world at large , including the owner with the paper title if he be not himself the possessor , so far as is reasonably practicable and so far as the processes of the law will allow . " …
11 MEASURING the cost of the other source of capital — equity — is far harder and so more controversial .
12 But where there is an ambiguity , or the law is otherwise unclear or so far undeclared by an appellate court , the English court is not only entitled but , in my judgment , obliged to consider the implications of article 10 .
  Next page