Example sentences of "and so [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Since the progress zone 's existence is dependent on a signal from the ridge , removal of the ridge results in the disappearance of the progress zone and so effectively the clock in the cells is stopped permanently . |
2 | In order to buy the oil off us , they had to pay sterling and so hence the demand for sterling goes up and suddenly we were viewed as a very rich economy . |
3 | G. On the western lowlands Chester ( 58 000 people ) is a central place where the Romans and the Normans defended what was once the lowest bridging point over the River Dee and so also the route into northern Wales . |
4 | Corinne Gotch , Booksellers Association marketing executive and NBS committee member , commented : ‘ Fewer booksellers are taking part , and so clearly the sale needs to be re-examined from both a bookselling and publishing point of view to see what can be cone to encourage greater participation . ’ |
5 | So I took the name and address and so eventually a summons came through for this old lady . |
6 | Erm , yeah we , we did take direct action and so eventually the ad was dropped , but if we 'd just complained and not taken any action the ad would n't have been dropped . |
7 | Alternatively the mother may not offer the food quickly enough and so eventually the child loses concentration and interest . |
8 | Er we said last week that the on the only , the only real way that the peasants were gon na er mobilize was if they , they thought that they could actually win and so surely the violence would have been a means of saying we 're a credible force to be reckoned with |
9 | And as they went on , you know , it was gradually working up and so therefore the graph , each man 's productivity you know , was rising . |
10 | And so on the whole the unions in Britain have seen this as a way of catching some people who otherwise would fall through the net entirely . |
11 | Depending on the company , excluding any one or more of these items could have a dramatic effect on the volatility of its results , and so on the element of risk in its PRP scheme . |
12 | And so perhaps the time had come just to sit down somewhere on the ground and wait . |
13 | Lamprey was reading the second , and so far no word had come downstairs that it had been rejected . |
14 | And so far the revenue have been going yeah , yeah , go away go away . |
15 | The days for R&D are over : we need demonstration , and so far the Prototype Fast Reactor has demonstrated only that the non-nuclear bits of the technology do n't work particularly well . |
16 | The Sackvilles were considerable landowners and so quite an inheritance was at stake — enough at any rate to turn Richard into the classic professional litigant before both lay and ecclesiastical courts . |
17 | Such rocks are rare in the forest , and so sometimes a queue forms to use one . |
18 | A deserted Disneyland-style House of Horrors , populated by ghosts , vampires and Frankenstein 's monster , proves equally useless in delaying or confusing the Daleks , and so reluctantly the Doctor decides they must stand and fight . |
19 | This reduces the advantage to the raider , and so too the likelihood of a takeover . |
20 | In addition , our use of our mother tongue is often so automatic and habitual , and so much a part of our individual and social identity , that help is needed to stand back and reflect on aspects of language with some degree of objectivity . |
21 | It became clear that travelling was important to Morris and so much an inspiration that if he ever felt bored at home or lacking in inspiration he just packed a suitcase and got on the nearest train to visit someone . |
22 | It became clear that travelling was important to Morris and so much an inspiration that if he ever felt bored at home or lacking in inspiration he just packed a suitcase and got on the nearest train to visit someone . |
23 | God plays an important role in Coleridge 's poetry , as a symbol of ultimate creativity ; both ‘ the creation ’ in biblical terms , and the powers of creation with which we are all invested , are the result of the workings of the ‘ Great Universal Teacher ’ , and so consequently the poet has tremendous respect for God , as he lets us think as we wish ; ‘ he shall mould thy spirit and by giving make it ask ’ , is a line that seems to sum up Coleridge 's views adequately . |