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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Parsys does n't expect to have the SN9000 ready until ‘ late 1992 ’ — it will take three months or so to bed the new chip in when it does arrive .
2 They may take a week or so to work , but can kill most deep-rooted perennial weeds without being persistent .
3 The Iznik pottery from Turkey dating from the fifteenth and sixteenth century explodes with colour on more sophisticated white grounds ; Iznik is now highly sought after by Turkish yuppies and prices run from £2,000 or so to £15,000 .
4 He sat in the back with him , for company , and chatted soothingly of nothing as the driver did the eight miles or so to Kirton , and swept into the riding-school yard .
5 Half an hour or so to dinner .
6 The official plan is for oil 's share of consumption to rise from its present 50% or so to 60% in 1990 , then to drop back to 40% by the year 2000 through increased use of natural gas both in the home and for electricity generation .
7 Then we went over the two Harnham Bridges , one with its niches to enable pedestrians to shelter from passing vehicles and so to Exeter Street and home .
8 For Newcastle-upon-Tyne and so to Spain ,
9 And so to Shipley , West Yorkshire , to the ordinary runner 's shop .
10 And so to cricket .
11 And so to London .
12 She is proposing electrification of the line between Middlesbrough , Eaglescliffe and Northallerton and so to London .
13 The A n T m tracts are known to strongly contribute to gel mobility anomaly and so to DNA curvature ( 1,3,4,9,26 ) .
14 And so to Britain and not a whiff of a hysterical fan in sight .
15 tracks at Scrubs Lane , which connected with South London and so to Charlton Works .
16 And so to Paradise .
17 And so to Montreal , again accompanied by Geoffrey Wilkinson and Peter Bardon and by this time all well seasoned campaigners .
18 During the latter part of the nineteenth century and the early part of the twentieth century , the application of quantitative methods of science was extended to psychology and so to education .
19 Turning right along the lane brought you to Southampton Road by Dairyhouse Bridge , another right turn and along the main road to another footpath opposite Waterloo Gardens — this led into the churchyard and so to home .
20 And so to transponders implanted under the skin of New Mexico cattle .
21 And so to sex .
22 And so to standard two , where the That was th the next year , each class was expected to take about a year , which it did .
23 And so to court
24 And so to Ascot , where she started at 11–4 on to beat just four opponents for the two-and-a-half-mile marathon .
25 A bite to eat , some relaxing television , an hour with Dorothy Wordsworth and so to bed .
26 And so to bed .
27 And so to bed
28 And so to bed
29 And so to bed .
30 " Postcript : and so to bed " , an unmistakable token of its author 's skill and wit , is presented in the form of a short story narrated from two viewpoints , His and Hers , which allude to the style of actionbooks and romances respectively .
  Next page