Example sentences of "[adv] often [verb] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 She had left him , just as she so often threatened to do .
2 It was less worry than the lethargy which so often seemed to overcome him .
3 Tom laughed , of course , and she did n't know if she was pleased or angered that he so often seemed to find her so amusing .
4 Critics point out the nit-picking thoroughness which legal authorities in the Republic so often bring to bear on extradition requests .
5 But these issues , which so often seem to dominate the debate in Scotland at party political level , are frankly of little moment to the electorate at large .
6 Of the reasons why females so often fail to make it to the very top , two are basic : some of the best women managers do not achieve their full potential in business because they do not know how exceptional they are , and others fail to get a boardroom seat because they lack the confidence .
7 What British people so often fail to understand is that the old inter-island divisions and prejudices that have always dogged Caribbean life are still present , and that a successful cricket team is the one thing that transcends this fragmentation .
8 Thus , the red tape that so often seems to characterize bureaucracies need not be a manifestation of bureaucrats ' love for due process .
9 Acceptance so often seems to rest with what we are and our place in society .
10 Well , we have our own gifts , but the presentation of food is not one of them , and since French cooks and food purveyors so often appear to lose the lightness of their touch in this respect when they leave their native land and settle abroad , one can only conclude that the special stimulant which brings these gifts into flower is in the air of France itself .
11 Ultimately , much of the debate comes down to the question of choice , the word that the Tories have so successfully colonised in rhetoric and so often failed to deliver in reality .
12 Culture is so often used to justify nationalism today perhaps because people are a little embarrassed to give the more traditional grounds for believing in the existence of nations : the idea that nations are characterized by common biological descent , ethnic origin or race .
13 The violence of the language used by the chronicler of St Albans shows his hatred of the Forest system , which was so often used to extort money from the monasteries .
14 Censorship and control are nevertheless often made to look absurd .
15 Carers who do not withdraw altogether from the labour market nevertheless often have to reduce or restrict the hours they can work .
16 The term " mass balance " is thus often taken to mean that the total mass of materials used at the beginning of ( and during ) the process must equal the total mass of products , by-products , unused reactants and solvents at the end of the process .
17 But psychoanalysis 's focus on sexual differentiation still often manages to make female-male psychological differences seem absolute .
18 The duppy is the personification of evil and only capable of malicious acts ; at the very least its fetid breath will cause a victim to vomit violently , though it is more often asked to kill via its pernicious touch .
19 More often condemned to live than die , the characters that people the novels and stories of Milan Kundera are the architects as much as victims of their own fates .
20 The analytic versus holistic dichotomy as it applies to laterality research has been more often invoked to explain results in a post hoc fashion than it has itself been subjected to experimental scrutiny .
21 Moreover , when they do occur they are more often allowed to operate in territories ( in both a spatial and a policy sense ) in which others ' intervention is limited .
22 But Britain 's disabled athletes more often have to depend on events like this disco to pay their fare .
23 For one thing , as Jardine points out , while on the one hand the shift of wealth to the mercantile classes was leading to the break-up of the dress code , and enabling the socially mobile to appropriate , for purposes of inclusion , what were supposed to be signs of their exclusion , it was also the case that those who had ‘ arrived ’ socially often wanted to enforce the code against those who had not .
24 Religions have also often attempted to reduce all human action to stylistic embrace as an expression of cosmological pretensions .
25 Public administration also often has to satisfy equity criteria in its treatment of individual cases , especially when acting in a quasi judicial role .
26 They are also often used to peddle influence .
27 It is also often used to pay for the preliminary work involved in making applications for civil and criminal legal aid .
28 The passive of hear is also often used to present an occurrence as an attested fact : ( 70 ) This term was also used by the cowboy in the sense of a human showin " fight , as one cowboy was heard to say , he arches his back like a mule in a hailstorm .
29 Parents may understandably often try to deny the reality of their black children 's unhappiness because they like to think that their children are secure and happy , thus reflecting their success as adopters .
30 Cereals and root vegetables make the largest contribution , and are most often cooked to aid digestion .
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