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

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1 If I was n't so old now I 'd do it again !
2 you know , for a few days like that , I mean th it , it , I al almost shudder at the thought because there 's so much else I would , you know , prefer to do with five hundred pounds .
3 No I , I got so much here I thought it would be fair to with you .
4 Sometimes I seem to be floating above it all , and sometimes I am so much inside I can smell the boy . ’
5 Not so much now I do n't think .
6 I have been feeling so groggy lately I just want to ensure the plan does n't go awry if anything happens to me … "
7 I looked out of the window and it was the back garden of Dr Jane 's house , and when Mrs Pitt came up to serve me and I complained Dr Jane laughed , and it was really Dr Jane all the time and the whole place was horrible and dark and dirty and when I got outside to follow my friends the ones who were usually in the dream there were n't any people and we were in a sort of studio and the village and the inn it was so obvious now I felt a fool for going in and sitting down and expecting to be served was the crudest sort of cardboard stage set like a model for a child 's history lesson and the colours were horrible and it smelt of a sort of horrible glue and — —
8 Your rate of allowances are n't there because they go out of date so fast so I 've got an extra , you can have one of these each with the rate of allowances .
9 I feel so tired yet I 've done nothing .
10 ‘ My past is so complicated even I get confused occasionally . ’
11 I was so hungry now I could hardly think .
12 and then er , so by half past four I just about had enough like , so five o'clock I said well for Christ sake come on open your stocking now like and waking Arthur up and he saying well I ai n't , and I said come on it 's five o'clock , alright , and by six o'clock we 're downstairs , half past six the door
13 He was so close now I could count his teeth .
14 Well Jennifer I think it 's er viburnum lanterna and it 's quite an interesting er bush because it was in the sixteenth century a er gave the tree its poetic name as he frequently come across it in old drove roads er over and across the old drove roads in the chalk downs of er from Winchester to Epsom and London but sorry about this it can grow to fifteen feet and in May it opens up its cluster of white flowers and it 's really quite an attractive thing but the berries I do n't think are so attractive so I think erm
15 ‘ I 'm so frightened tonight I can hardly breathe . ’
16 Oh right , well that 's not so bad then I 'm happy
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