Example sentences of "[noun sg] [adv] far [verb] [conj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Prestel Education started its own software service in the Autumn term of 1985 and the feedback so far suggests that this is a service which schools find most welcome . |
2 | Friends of the Earth has criticized the aid thus far given as being " directed to patching up and bolting on gismos , rather than developing alternative systems " . |
3 | Mr Paine , I feel sure , will be a candidate for some award or other and I trust he will remember the couple whose bravery obviously far exceeded that called for in the normal course of duty . |
4 | The heaviest fighting of the conflict so far ensued as Serbian nationalists intensified efforts to consolidate their positions before the peace conference began on Sept. 7 . |
5 | However , the evidence so far suggests that it is not enough to persuade businesspeople that rates will really be fixed forever . |
6 | The evidence so far suggests that the interviewers will fail . |
7 | However , the evidence so far suggests that bats are using the technique , not to distinguish an echo from the original sound that produced it , but for the more subtle task of distinguishing echoes from other echoes . |
8 | His best season so far came when he rode 28 winners , and with 22 to his credit already this term , he is on course to better that total . |
9 | If as Mr Dalyell alleges , the EEC is about the push for lead-free petrol , one can expect a propaganda barrage more far reaching than Associated Octels recent £100 000 advertising campaign . |
10 | Our discussion so far implies that many animals are lay physicists , that they have implicit knowledge of real-world properties ( such as the optics of 3-D objects viewed in air or water ) that can be explicitly described by professional physicists . |
11 | At the end of the first line ( colon ) when we pause momentarily for processing the sense so far , we make a provisional judgment on the completeness or otherwise , the self-sufficiency or open-endedness , of the sense-unit thus far read or heard . |