Example sentences of "[vb pp] so [adv] [coord] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 One of the problems with the stream situation was that those pupils who found themselves in the bottom streams , who found that they were perhaps not regarded so highly or so positively by their teachers , tended to respond with misbehaviour in their classes , with occasionally vandalism around the school and generally a negative attitude towards the school and their teachers in general , and the immediate effect of the mixed ability grouping was to eradicate behavioural problems of that kind almost entirely .
2 That comes automatically , together with iced water , before Peggy Sue begins interrogating you , and is replenished so often and so generously that you make a note to speak harshly to the next British rip-off artist who rushes you 80p for a niggardly Nescafe .
3 Things are not altered so quickly or coarsely by common people as they are by fashionable people …
4 His arm , at first placed so firmly and impersonally around her , relaxed and instead his hand moved at her waist , caressing its curve .
5 FEW companies have fallen so far and fast as IBM .
6 Brian Roper 's unsuccessful spot kick perpetuated the agony for the Donegal boys who had once again come so near and yet so far , losing their third final in a row .
7 His ability to organise often went unseen — though never unappreciated — since everything was done so unobtrusively and apparently without effort .
8 So much done so quickly and then nothing .
9 Certainly his skill as an administrator was a vital factor in ensuring that so much was built so quickly and magnificently .
10 ‘ They were separated , but they were separated so fully and so completely , and so soon after their birth , that the threat withdrew . ’
11 Okay , we can agree what I have said so far but then I 'm going to have to look at other things once I 've made further changes .
12 ‘ Odd thing , ’ Flavia said , ‘ I should n't have thought so either and now I 'm convinced she does .
13 In the autumn of that year I was to wedge into the mirror of my college bedsitting-room a piece of paper bearing the following lines : ‘ Life 's a cheat and all things shew it/I thought so once and now I know it ’ .
14 The judgement is ‘ performed so constantly and so quick , that we take that for the perception of our sensation which is an idea formed by our judgment ’ .
15 This can be done in various ways , most of which can be found in eighteenthand early nineteenth-century fiction , but not used so artfully or extensively .
16 All the same , watching the thin , lemon beam of sun catch across the postman 's bicycle bars , she let herself think it unfair that her dear friend , Faith Lavender , should have died so suddenly and so much younger than the husk of a woman left in the next room .
17 The show is advanced so sluggishly and episodically that , apart from first and last reels , there could be a mix-up in reels without much comment . ’
18 THINGS have deteriorated so far and so fast at Higgs & Hill that shareholders were lucky to be offered anything as a final dividend .
19 Bathsheba 's young heart was full of pity for this sensitive man who had spoken so simply and honestly .
20 As Griffiths LJ explained in Lion Laboratories Ltd v Evans " I believe that the so-called iniquity rule evolved because in most cases where the facts justified a publication in breach of confidence the plaintiff had behaved so disgracefully or criminally that it was judged in the public interest that his behaviour should be exposed " and , as he aptly stated , " there is a world of difference between what is in the public interest and what is of interest to the public " .
21 Fergus knew the stories ; he knew how it was whispered that once inside the Prison of Hostages no one ever returned to the world of Men , but to Fergus , who had led the Fiana from the age of eighteen , and who knew the secrets and the devices and the weaknesses of half the ancient fortresses in Ireland , no prison was ever sealed so utterly and so completely that there was not a way out of it .
22 Do n't be impatient , assimilate the knowledge and learning you 've gained so far and then when the time is right you will coast forward even faster .
23 The French negotiators had very little leverage , because their president had indicated so often and so publicly his determination to reach an agreement as soon as possible .
24 He had felt sour ever since her arrival — he could admit it to himself now — but simply because it had all happened so unexpectedly and confusedly .
25 Why had they been killed so barbarously and so mysteriously ?
26 That his bravery was ended so abruptly and unexpectedly seems very cruel .
27 Never again in Anselm 's lifetime was the papal position to be stated so clearly and uncompromisingly .
28 Do species have to be maintained so uniformly and tidily , so predictably , as if they were part of a genetic card index ?
29 Do species have to be maintained so uniformly and tidily , so predictably , as if they were part of a genetic card index ?
30 Few books can have captured so powerfully and quickly the imagination and appealed to the religious yearnings of a gullible public than Chariots of the Gods and its successors .
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