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

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1 I always seem to , I think we , we were always at Stanford Hall that we must , it was a must that we have a good programme because if somebody comes and there 's nothing doing , they think well you know yo I , I , you see I suppose I 've got that orientated into Guild work but a friend of mine enticed me to go to er a club and erm it 's just simply for any age group , any sex male or female , but you must bereaved you know and erm she is a widow and I was widow , so I went but you see we , we sat round and you just , there was nothing organised and to me who had always been organised , I just felt so like a lost soul you know and er then one chappie put some records on and you cou and you could n't dance to them and I said oh , you know to me I thought wh you know but I do n't want to do it , I 've got enough to do but , I , I was straight away , I was looking for the organisation behind it you know .
2 I just feel so terribly guilty — at inconveniencing you .
3 I just feel so damned silly and helpless .
4 I soon knew so much they could not deny me any longer !
5 I do n't think I ever moved so fast in all my life .
6 I later realized that the reason I always did so badly was I just could n't see the blackboard because I was so short-sighted .
7 When her mother is convalescing , the novelty of spending her days in a dressing-room appeals to Jane Austen : ‘ I always feel so much more elegant in it than in the parlour .
8 What I was really doing , up there in my private darkness , while below he played my mother 's old jazz records and new ones he 'd bought , why I really went so early was to have longer imagining him into his father .
9 I never got so far in teaching you .
10 That night I cried so much — I never felt so far away from anything I knew and I 'd never missed my mother so much in my life .
11 Its just happened so fast , ’ says the former Shanna Jackson .
12 Although it was all very exciting , I could not avoid noticing the dirt and bad smells and heat , and I compared it sadly with my village home , which now seemed so far away .
13 Whenever I hear a man being witty or sensible or kindly or civilized I think : the qualities which now seem so much a part of this man could be stripped away at any time , and there would be left just a man who suffered and who fought with his suffering like an animal .
14 Or coming back with bruises ; how you suddenly became so very clumsy or so easily marked .
15 Somehow she suddenly felt so overwhelmingly aware of Ven that , while recognising that she was eating beef of some kind , food as such seemed incidental .
16 We shall have to live with it , because er I I do n't think that any hope of any redress next year , but the got to be established of a different system , of me a different methodology for the foreseeable years , if we 're going to get those schemes through that you supported wholeheartedly and congratulated us and for bringing forward the new road schemes for er the that that that that you so approved so warmly yesterday .
17 I lived in Switzerland for fifteen years and I knew many many people who after having had their children would have breasts implants and , they just felt that they 'd got back the figure that they had before the children and particularly one of my friends she had twins and her stomach was so stretched and after her pregnancy she 'd got all this sort of sagging skin and what she regretted was that she waited fifteen years before she decided to go and have something done and she just felt so much better about it .
18 That goes without saying ; for instance , that charming staff member in Dublin was only doing what she always did so well .
19 ‘ Yes , but then she always looks so much nicer than I do , ’ Belinda responded guilelessly .
20 ‘ And you always dress so well , too , ’ she said approvingly .
21 ‘ To be honest , I 'm a bit tired of being described just as a jazz singer or with words like ‘ abstract ’ , ’ she says , responding to reviews that have tried a little too hard to distance her from the rave scene she still feels so much a part of .
22 Yet why , with such skin , such eyes , and that good mouthful of teeth , did she still appear so very plain ?
23 Have you ever talked so well , needed less sleep , returned to sex so eagerly , as when you were first in love ?
24 Er My Patriarch and er is is taking the lead from Ritto who later ran so well in the Cesarovitch but just look at Morley Street now .
25 She now felt so dangerously soporific that even the sneaking fear of Roman 's insidious effect on her could n't rouse her from this lovely torpor …
26 She even goes so far as to say her grandmother does the warm-up exercises , using tins of soup instead of weights , though her husband Richard Gere sticks to Tai Chi and riding his bike .
27 ‘ But why you no say so before , baby ?
28 Thus in choosing between two alternative sets of pleasure one can not necessarily decide which is preferable by an arithmetical calculation , nor could one necessarily do so even if one was omniscient .
29 We really know so very little about it . ’
30 But , as Mr Nearn points out , it is a driver 's car , and motoring journalists have heaped it with praise for many years , one even going so far as to say that your smile ‘ will need surgically removing ’ after driving one .
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