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

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1 the forces of the countries of the socialist camp are so great today and they are so strong economically that they can fully take upon themselves , on the basis of the development of normal trade relations , the provision of Cuba with all the necessary goods which are denied her by the United States … the Soviet Union is prepared to deliver oil and other goods in amounts fully meeting the requirements of Cuba , in exchange for Cuban goods .
2 This feeling was so strong there that he almost expected to see Linkworth standing there , watching him .
3 She might have been any age between thirty and sixty and Wexford set the lower limit so low only because of her young children .
4 He is not so light-hearted now as he used to be — too much responsibility .
5 The thing I was getting so pissed off cos I 've run it about ten times now , cos you keep coming and do alterations !
6 At the start of chapter 16 we are reminded of it again , and things seem so hopeless now that Sarah urges Abraham to have a child by her Egyptian maid , Hagar .
7 when the music gets so loud here that you ca n't stand
8 Her voice was so dry now that sometimes Kit fancied he heard her when he could not , in the scraping of the boughs of trees , the footfalls in the dusty earth .
9 This is so respectable today that Christians of all denominations have embraced it .
10 The section on the chemistry of gasication is not so definitive partly because the temperature gradient , which varies according to fuel and gasifier design , affects both the position of chemical equilibria and the relative rates of different reactions within the gasifier but also because few experimental results are available for interpretation .
11 A majority of the United Kingdom workforce decided against strike action and the mood of the Glasgow workers was so clear yesterday that a vote did not have to be taken .
12 Indeed this ‘ gender neutral ’ definition of sexism has become so prevalent even since the first edition of this book was written , it is necessary in this revised edition to be much more explicit about my use of the term .
13 Auntie Ethel 's old school friend , Elaine , not so popular now that she was Rich and Successful .
14 I just wonder whether erm I think that stool there might have been better to have her sitting on that one , not quite so high up and she could have adopted a more comfortable pose and she would n't have needed another prop for her foot .
15 In 1792 wages in Sheffield were said to be so high generally as to allow the leisure-preferring cutlers to live comfortably from working only three days a week .
16 They are still the most glamorous club in Britain , but our confidence is so high now that we could take them apart .
17 ‘ That 's a great shame , because unemployment is so universal nowadays that I would have hoped the stigma would disappear . ’
18 The Drôme , the Tricastin , the Nyonsais regions are so different from Provence , so unfrequented early in the year , so interesting historically and architecturally why hurry off to the south ?
19 Perhaps because something called a stoup in a church was not so interesting enough as he had thought . ’
20 Er , so some how or another you 've learned them , right .
21 So some how or other you 've got put little bit of oil or something on it .
22 It was irrational to be so resentful now when it was so nearly over anyway , but she was too infuriated by his failure to love her to be thinking clearly .
23 Isaac was old and his eyes were so dim so that he could not see ’ ( 27.1 ) .
24 My main concern is , that I think that over the years , as people have lived longer and as they became retired , we 've tended to neglect them , not so much financially and in terms of their conditions , though I think there 's always arguments about that ; I think we 've actually neglected their role in the community .
25 But perhaps you 've got a long drive ahead , ’ he said , not so much hesitantly as enquiringly .
26 But a certain failure , distressing to themselves , to be like other people , caused them to sink back , with so much else that drifted or was washed up , into the mud moorings of the great tide-way .
27 Little kids eat you alive , they want so much physically and emotionally . ’
28 She found it unnerving to be made aware that she could want a man so much physically when her mind was totally against it .
29 On the other hand , neither did the faithful military figure so much here as it did in the political activities of the Smolensk party organization .
30 The problem was that I think David was moving so much away and into this trip of actually doing music with a message — of actually delivering something on stage which meant something to other people of his age .
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