Example sentences of "so [adj] be [adv] the " in BNC.

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1 So subtle are often the
2 So that 's probably the most important part of the manual .
3 Is that , there , tha that 's , that 's e so that 's just the extra amount ?
4 So that 's exactly the position that we have and there had been no proof as far as I can see to demonstrate that in fact the present situation is not working .
5 That 's so that 's there the abbots used to stay .
6 So that 's usually the way things happen , the president ca n't spell out things and dot the Is and cross the Ts .
7 We try to formulate policies that 'll meet the needs of the people who speak to us and then we use officers , not to make necessarily proposals on policies , but to help us to work out the financial ways of achieving those policies , so that 's almost the other way round from the way that John outlined .
8 So that 's really the challenges which way the client interacts and what today 's er event is about .
9 But what we 're proposing here essentially , is to say we 've got a seventy thousand pound contingency not specifically allocated , we will reduce that down to thirty thousand , but within that thirty thousand we will have to deal with requests we get to increase grants to people who 're already in receipt of grant support , and also we 've also found it extremely helpful to have a small reserve so that when a body comes along and says I would do this for you , but I do need a small grant in order to do it , and you 're effectively buying a hundred thousand pounds worth of service for ten thousand pounds , that you have actually got a ten thousand pounds to put it in , rather than funding everyone , so that 's basically the policy behind it Chair .
10 In the urban environment ( Douglas , 1983 ) and in an ecosystem approach to the city ( Douglas , 1981 ) Douglas employs an ecosystem or systems approach and that , particularly the control system , may provide the means for study in physical geography and so that is appropriately the subject for chapter 7 .
11 The belief that mid-nineteenth-century bourgeois were unusually full-blooded and therefore obliged to build unusually impenetrable defences against physical temptation is unconvincing : what made the temptations so great was precisely the extremism of the accepted moral standards , which also made the fall correspondingly more dramatic , as in the case of the Catholic-puritan Count Muffat in Emile Zola 's Nana , the novel of prostitution in the Paris of the 1860s .
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