Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [verb] so far " in BNC.

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1 Proper evaluation of the scheme requires more than the anecdotal accounts published so far if the true effects are to be monitored and the policy lessons learnt .
2 British Rail has so far totally failed to do so .
3 The theoretical models discussed so far provide insights into the distributional impact of policy measures ; but for practical implementation the analytical skeleton needs to be clothed with empirical evidence on the actual distribution of endowments and on individual behaviour .
4 In Somerset , the majority of the 500+ deserted settlements identified so far were formerly small hamlets of two or three farms and not large nucleated villages .
5 She is launching herself into Europe with at least as much conviction as any other British businessperson has so far shown .
6 All the scientific evidence collected so far suggests that biotechnology is really very safe .
7 The truth is that the East German leadership has so far shown all too few signs of wanting to change .
8 Speaking earlier at the Asian Institute of Technology , WWF President Prince Philip said : " Thailand ratified the Convention in 1963 , but I 'm sorry to have to say that no enabling legislation has so far been enacted " .
9 There can be little doubt that this reflects the very high unemployment experienced so far and the resultant weakened state of the union movement and of labour generally .
10 And of the party in the Fifties : ‘ the Great Debate in British socialism has so far consisted in one side talking nonsense and the other side keeping mum . ’
11 Over 60 R&D contracts , involving collaboration with an extensive network of European companies have so far been negotiated .
12 Ludwig is also the Emperor 's bodyguard and his mere presence has so far proven enough to discourage any attempts on the Emperor 's life .
13 Thirty-five orthopaedic operations have so far been cancelled , and 65 more may have to be postponed .
14 None of the symbolic usages reviewed so far is very difficult to follow .
15 There was no outright attack on the civil rights gained so far , but Nixon , mindful of the white " backlash " in 1968 , spoke out against some of the more unpopular results of greater racial equality , such as the bussing of school-children .
16 The relevance of such multiple sensory realities to conventional evolutionary theory has so far remained unconsidered .
17 One explanation for the cautious approach adopted so far is the resistance that is encountered whenever attempts are made to curb the discretion of the judiciary , as we shall see in the next section .
18 Such a double-fisted attack has so far posed no extraordinary problems for librarians , but a series of events over the last few years illustrates that the issue of the law and censorship could become a major problem in the management of libraries .
19 Observations from Earth-based telescopes have so far revealed a wealth of spectral lines , from over 50 varieties of molecules in space , some of which are operating as natural masers .
20 Midori Suzuki , spokesperson for FCT , reported that the Japanese public has so far been denied access to cable TV ( CATV ) , but she outlined some possibilities for access in the future .
21 But none of the various attempted explanations has so far proved satisfactory .
22 Economic reform has so far meant that Poles can gaze in wonderment at now well-stocked meat stalls they have no money to buy from .
23 An in vivo uptake of polypeptides by human enterocytes has so far not been demonstrated , however .
24 The Left Coalition has so far ruled out linking up with the conservatives again — the improbable alliance of last June has been blamed for much of their drop in support — but has already hinted that it would be willing to support a national unity government as proposed by the New Democrat leader Mr Constantine Mitsotakis .
25 The search for cheap but reliable mass screening tests and accurate diagnostic algorithms has so far been fruitless , so case-finding based on clinical suspicion will continue to be the most important strategy .
26 FIERCE competition between building societies and National Savings has so far spared savers even sharper cuts in interest as the base rate falls .
27 Our starting point for analysing structure happens to have been with an exercise , the form of drama popularised by Brian Way , and yet little attempt has so far been made by him or by anyone else to show how these apparently slight adjustments within the structure of the exercise can seriously affect the outcome .
28 Members of the radical Inter-regional group went so far as to table a motion of no confidence in the government , but a vote on whether to consider this motion was heavily defeated on May 29 .
29 it is clear that the machinery of representative parliamentary democracy has so far proved unsuitable as the mechanism for translating personal preferences into day-to-day practice .
30 Exit-poll findings and election returns showed that Tyminski had been most successful in the countryside and small towns , where the benefits of the economic reforms had so far been negligible , and among young people waiting for housing and workers concerned about their jobs .
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