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

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1 Er I mean you obviously have to make erm decisions about that and so on .
2 Now th he was saying that , it 's being argued here that , that very seldom is it that the punishment exceeded the crime , that they 're able to assess , look at the behaviour of the people in power before the movement er gathered pace and to , to , to assess how they er they were , how sort of humane and so on and , and by saying that depending on how you , you , you did before hand , you w you now your punishment , it will , will be a administered accordingly which is an interesting concept , I 'm not sure quite how accurate these assessments could 've been , I think really when things get going it 's er really very difficult to stop them .
3 If the first number chosen is three , then all those at the party have to join in groups of three and so on .
4 And another quaver , those two will be tied the join taking them onto the next group of three and so on .
5 I gulped , opened the door and was greeted by the sight of twenty or so completely naked people .
6 Thus those interests mobilized at the centre around the processes of production — the organized class interests of industrial and finance capital , the professions and organized labour — will differ from those organized locally , where mobilization usually cuts across class lines to be based on specific local consumption issues - council tenants , parents of under-fives and so on .
7 Amongst the couple of hundred or so there , were some twenty or thirty men .
8 Red icing for Labour , Blue for Tory and so on .
9 Aa is the sum of the probabilities of all the routes with one junction , Ba 2 of the routes with two , Ca 3 of the routes with three and so on .
10 month you end up with twelve and so on .
11 Although when regressed one does not go back to the immediate past life , then the one before it , then the one before that and so on , by the time Martin had experienced regression six times it was possible to put the lives in chronological order so that we could try and see if there was any lesson to be learnt from them .
12 It is the one-sidedness of privatisation of the monopoly public utilities that has been so apparent since the process started with British Telecom in 1985 that so deeply offends ordinary people throughout the country .
13 Rostand had grown rich on the royalties from his astonishing verse drama , Cyrano de Bergerac , which was first performed in 1897 and so successfully that its author was reportedly made a knight of the Légion d'Honneur on the opening night in between the fourth and fifth acts .
14 The Family Expenditure Survey , the longest running , annual , national survey , will be used to construct five year snap-shots of people who were aged 16-20 in 1961 , and 21-25 in 1966 and so on .
15 Jennies were smashed across Lancashire in 1769 and so strongly resisted in the West Country that their penetration in Wiltshire and Gloucestershire was limited before the early 1790s .
16 ‘ I am working hard to try and build on this and so far we have about 16 corporate members .
17 Y T alright , is a of constant alpha plus beta into erm X T plus lander X T Y is one that 's lander squared , X T minus two plus lander cubed , X T minus three and so on and so on into infinity .
18 Now join 1 to 8,2 to 9,3 to 10,4 to 11 and so on , in a different coloured pen or pencil if you can .
19 But then they raised the target to 16 then to 18 and so on .
20 Join up 1 to 5 , 2 to 6,3 to 7 , 4 to 8 and so on .
21 When the 20-stroke rally has been attained , increase the target to 30 , then to 40 and so on , but keep it realistic .
22 Right , well if we multiply both sides , we multiply both sides of B right , by this co-efficient lander alright , we get right , lander by T minus one , lander erm right then what we do is that we get beta into lander X T minus one plus lander squared , X T minus two lander cubed , X T minus three , and lander to four X T minus four and so on and so s so on until infinity right .
23 Four plus minus two has the same answer as four minus two and so on because the plus and minus gives you a minus .
24 The ball is thrown to the number one and then to two and so on .
25 The behavioural view says we behave as we do ( for example not stealing , not hitting others , not spitting in dining rooms , not going about naked and so on ) because we have learned to behave this way .
26 The results are greeted by wild applause as one act is toppled from the lead by another and so on .
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