Example sentences of "and so [verb] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He bluntly rejected not only the demands of the Rada but also the claims of Ukrainian nationalism ( and so contradicted Party Policy : ) |
2 | He also organised special print runs with publishers of such relatively slow-selling classic titles as A P Herbert 's Uncommon Law and Hilaire Belloc 's Cautionary Tales , and so enabled publishers to keep otherwise uneconomic editions in print . |
3 | In addition , the social imperialists held that empire was the means to secure and enhance working-class living standards and employment in the metropolitan country , and so deflect revolution . |
4 | However , I state again that enforcement procedures offer plenty of opportunities for someone to pay their dues and so avoid imprisonment . |
5 | For example , a building contractor whose company builds houses for the council should decline to become a member of the housing committee and so avoid innuendos which would otherwise follow . |
6 | He therefore counsels Hoccleve to have faith and so avoid damnation . |
7 | Alternatively , the public may simply have become more sensitised to crime , through media and press reports or the Government 's crime prevention publicity , and so believing crime to be on the increase they are more likely to report offences leading to a rise in recorded crime which will lead to further media attention and so on in a ‘ deviancy amplification spiral ’ . |
8 | However , for our present purposes this is unnecessary ; and in any event it often involves ill-conditioned equations and so lacks accuracy . |
9 | We reasoned that , as cytokines in vivo will be rapidly washed away , MIP-1 β might be bound to endothelial surfaces and so induce adhesion in its immobilized form . |
10 | Many mothers continue to work part-time even when their children start school , so they can be there when they come home in the afternoon and so holiday childcare arrangements are a little easier . |
11 | A leading opponent of disestablishment , Bishop A. G. Edwards of St Asaph [ q.v. ] , later wrote of Rendel that he ‘ read the Welsh character in its strength and weakness ’ , and so achieved unity and discipline within the Welsh party . |
12 | as for trade , it will be encouraged by it every way ; for carriage of all kind of heavy goods will be much easier , the waggoners will either perform in less time , or draw heavier loads , or the same load with fewer horses ; the pack-horses will carry heavier burthens , or travel further in a day … all which will tend to lessen the rate of carriage , and so bring goods cheaper to market . |
13 | Soft materials , like fibreboards and soft furnishings , also do n't respond , and so prevent sound reflecting or bouncing back off them , as it would from a hard surface like a mirror . |
14 | Bridge moved up a place at the weekend to fourth from bottom , without playing a game , as Bedlington had three points deducted for playing an ineligible player , and so swapped places with the Darlington club . |
15 | It is therefore vital that this transformation does not introduce a PAR and so make use of the recursive procedure we are currently defining . ) |
16 | We can therefore see such a plasmid as a temporary alliance between genes which induce conjugation in the host bacterium ( and so make transmission of the plasmid itself possible ) , and genes which help the host to survive and multi ply . |
17 | This process confirms the belief that many of the difficulties can not be resolved by teachers in their classrooms and so require specialist services in a specialist context . |
18 | Bacon did not want to teach but liked the studio that was offered him , and so replaced Minton , less as a tutor than as an honorary visitor . |
19 | This means that they are always slightly damp , and so step paint would tend to bubble or blister . |
20 | In some Homes , a ripple bed is used , in which air rotates inside the bed and so relieves pressure in a regulated way . |
21 | In learning sign language the opportunities for doing this are relatively few , and so sign language learning takes place in a less than ideal environment . |
22 | The move to the country outside had begun , and so had Aarau 's export trade , at that time mostly textiles . |
23 | Yet they had both seen the horror , and so had Tina . |
24 | Miriam had offered to do it for him , and so had Eliza and Margaret , and he could , of course , easily have given it to the dhobi in spite of his inflated prices . |
25 | The recent conclusion that the Proconsul hand had a fully opposable thumb , with rotation at the trapezium-first metacarpal joint at least as extensive as in other hominoids , is of particular significance in combination with thumb length , for Proconsul lacks the relatively short thumb of the living great apes and so had hand proportions very similar to those of modern humans . |
26 | He retired over there : his marriage had gone and so had his daughter 's ’ — and so had Magill 's first marriage she knew : marriages in the secret world had a high casuality rate — ‘ and she went over to keep house for him . ’ |
27 | But Alix and Brian had found one another , and so had Otto and Caroline Werner : Esther was caught between lofty Edgar and little Pete Petrie , herself the smallest of all . |
28 | Yeah and so had wages increased in ? |
29 | She had settled in Thrush Green as snugly as a bird in its nest , and so had Jeremy . |
30 | It is often possible , then , to understand and so overcome spelling errors , once you understand why you are making an error and can work out a way of reminding yourself of the correct form . |