Example sentences of "and so the [noun] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 These flies are usually quite secretive , living in herbage on or near the ground , and so the fungus has evolved an elaborate strategy to obtain the best wind dispersal of its spores .
2 This naturally reduces their attraction for each other and so the forces holding the cell wall together laterally are diminished and the cell swells .
3 The King was in no position to make such a decision and , in any case , Baldwin had already decided to meet Parliament when he met the King on 10 December , and so the King did not even have to persuade him to adopt what he believed to be the correct course .
4 In most cases a man earning £300 per week would be expected to spend more than the man earning £100 per week , and so the transactions demand should be larger for the former .
5 In these cases the arc of movement of the rig is not great enough to get the CE sufficiently behind the CLR and so the board becomes unresponsive .
6 And so the board agreed to send Oliver to work for the undertaker .
7 Erm and so the approach has to be quite different .
8 Local registry offices will also supply copies of certificates if the event was recorded in their district , but they do not provide facilities for consulting indexes and so the genealogist has to have fairly precise information before a successful search for a certificate can be made .
9 And so the story continues .
10 And so the story goes that he er said he would support David er David G Lloyd George and help on this case .
11 With much cloud , mist and rain , and little sunshine , cereal crops seldom ripen and so the farmers avoid planting them .
12 About fifty years ago the price of sugar increased , and so the farmers changed from turnips as a fodder crop to sugarbeet .
13 Food is to be found on the farmland all around and so the herds help themselves .
14 In the epigram it is ‘ the citadel of Ilium taken ’ , and Pausanias calls it ‘ Troy taken and the departure of the Greeks ’ ; and so the description shows it to have been — not the night of terror but the morning after .
15 A detailed analysis of such techniques is beyond the scope of this book , and so the coverage given to them will be generally limited to their marketing applications .
16 Soil temperature was not controlled in our study , and so the evidence linking temperature and root mortality is circumstantial .
17 Of course they could n't all be allowed to hide behind the columns of the nave or squat upon the font , and so the stewards took down the barriers and let them flood into my side .
18 Unemployment of registered disabled is always at a much higher rate than unemployment generally and so the recession has severely damaged the chances of large numbers of disabled people obtaining work .
19 This is mainly because in the summer months there is less rainfall and cloud and so the grain ripens well and can be harvested easily .
20 ‘ We discovered there were elms which we could use on the Floors Estate and so the Duke agreed to sell them to us . ’
21 An odd diversion , perhaps , from one of the country 's leading constitutional lawyers , but he was seized of the gift , and so the poetry became assertive .
22 Obviously one can not re-use plants for later measurement by the other two systems and so the graphs obtained have fewer points than the earlier ones .
23 However , from this point on , there is no full theory ; the description is almost entirely observational and so the interpretation involves more guesswork .
24 And so the systems become a little more complicated in that you have to keep records of your customers , of your orders , of your stock , and to some extent , of how your own production , or your assembly , is getting along .
25 And so the day came when , stripped of their weapons , that Ducas gang were herded to the garrison block nestling in the shell of the hive hard by the gateway fortress which guarded access and egress for the land trains .
26 The Liberals had decided to end their pact and so the government had no firm majority in the House on which to rely .
27 And as , as we said before , erm , many of the , erm people who lived in the poorer parts of erm the country , whether in urban or rural En erm England did n't really know about basic nutrition and and health I mean you just ate what was available but you did n't know why and so the government started this campaign to introduce you know knowledge about diet and how important it was .
28 And so the way to counteract the disease was to rid the body of its ill-balanced humours by means of blood-letting , laxatives or emetics — the three standard methods by which patients were hastened to an early death .
29 And so the masquerade begins .
30 Many parents comment that their child did the complete opposite of what was asked for several months and so the parents learned to say the opposite of what they wanted , for example , ‘ I really do n't want you to put your pyjamas on now ’ , or ‘ I do n't think you can eat all of that food ’ .
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