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

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1 Two miles or so past Tintagel the path drops down to Trebawith Strand .
2 She unfastened her cloak and he took it from her , noticing as he did so the brocade gown that so exactly matched the colour of her eyes .
3 THERE can be few musicals that so vividly evoke the era they portray as A Slice of Saturday Night , a 60s skit on teenage passions set in Eric ‘ Rubberlegs ’ De Vene 's Club A Go-Go .
4 Just one ground in the entire country does not pay for its police service , and of course that has to be Derby County football club , yet it is the Derbyshire police force that so desperately needs the money .
5 The same calculations that so accurately predict the proportions in which the elements are made in the big bang also predict the amounts in which they are made .
6 Relatives have to cope with mental illness that so often changes the personality of their loved one .
7 There now ensues the nagging doubt that so often accompanies the crux of the climb ; it 's all very well getting this far , but until those crucial moves are made it could all still come to nought .
8 Sitting down together to work out what are reasonable contributions to the relationship on both sides satisfies the teenager 's sense of fairness and cuts out the constant nagging , pleading and resentment that so quickly sours the good relationship that parents and children need to enjoy together .
9 Known as ‘ Fizzer ’ to his colleagues and our fans , Phil played in every game of Palace 's promotion season of 1988–89 and only an injury , sustained on his 1st Division debut at Queens Park Rangers , prevented him from completing full appearances in 1989–90 , although he was an ever-present member of the team that reached the 1990 FA Cup Final and so nearly seized the famous trophy .
10 And so generally buy the first thing that actually fits .
11 One suggestion is that AIDS patients , like the rest of us , have suffered from common viral and bacteria infections and so already possess the necessary antibodies for defence .
12 First , the Macintosh was designed as a graphical computer and so already possessed the necessary hardware to provide a typographically ‘ accurate ’ WYSIWYG display and then print it out onto the new LaserWriter printer .
13 In these papers , all kinds of non- and extra-philosophical activities become the basis for philosophical reflection , for instance menstruation and childbirth ( Brenda Almond 's paper ) ; a gut reaction to pornography ( Alison Assiter 's paper ) ; the fantasies that disturb because of their apparently unfeminist nature Jean Grimshaw 's paper ) ; and nonviolent demonstrations against missile bases ( Anne Seller 's paper ) ; the point in each case being that these experiences are the starting point , because their importance did not seem to be recognised within the theoretical categories already provided , and so urgently impel the theorist to work out categories that are more adequate .
14 Given that the cartridge may need to be removed for the purpose of transporting the printer , it means that , should any toner be spilled from the cartridge , it is likely to fall below the paper path , and so not contaminate the rest of the machine and subsequent print-outs .
15 And so why have the MPs taken it upon themselves now , remembering of course as I mentioned early , that they are on a minimum of thirty one thousand pounds a year .
16 Mr Moss Evans 's union , the Transport and General Workers , had called the lorry drivers out on the strike that a reading of contemporary newspapers suggests was the event , seen as characteristic of the abuse by trade unions of their power , that most vividly exposed the vacuity at the heart of policy and so most damaged the Labour Government 's prestige and prospects .
17 The training requires expenditure and so also does the replacement for the person away .
18 Many thanks to those who worked so hard and so well to prepare the children .
19 Such official intervention may in theory reduce the degree of exchange rate volatility , and so partially reduce the uncertainty in world trade that might result from a free float .
20 In this way traditional theory ‘ explains ’ in the absence of experience ( i.e. in abstraction ) and so merely confirms the ideological categories given to its consciousness .
21 Such matches and mismatches change over time , and so therefore does the use of the argument , and subjects which were previously regarded as vocational even if only in relation to a teaching career — are now justified on general grounds .
22 Locks , security staff , police , prisons , the mass media , insurance cover , safes and so on reflect the extent of crime .
23 While this is seen within Total Communication programmes in education , there is no doubt that acceptance of BSL , ASL and so on offers the greatest hope for the development of effective education for deaf children .
24 Double-headed again , with Nos 26007 and 26043 , a photo stop at Blackburn was soon reached and so on to join the Settle-Carlisle line at Hellifield Junction .
25 Lenneberg ( 1966 ) has argued that a great deal of evidence about deafness in children , aphasia , environmental deprivation of various kinds , muscular debilities and so on supports the hypothesis that language acquisition by children follows a definite maturational path , passing certain milestones of achievement in a certain order .
26 The granting of peerages to former politicians , chiefs of the defence staff and so on has the effect of enhancing the status of those whose only achievement in life is having been engendered by a privileged set of loins .
27 The nature and character of unity , twoness , threeness and so on underlie the whole of existence .
28 Display material , advertisements and so on need the extra quality and , if these are the products which you will be producing it is important to ensure that you can move between the systems without having to change the data .
29 We are aware of this in other situations , and so commonly rock the cradles and prams of babies .
30 And so out go the old troupers and in come the fresh-faced kids .
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