Example sentences of "[conj] so produce " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 These agents are toxic when given systemically , and so producing them at high concentration within the tumour is an attractive goal .
2 They sailed overhead and swayed with the slightly erratic action of the cableway holding them , bumping into each other now and again and so producing the clinking noise just audible over the din .
3 The difficulty is that the sites which have been extensively excavated , and so produced the largest quantities of pottery , such as Corbridge and Newstead , are multi-period , and the stratification of the excavations early in the century , consequently suspect .
4 In the simplest terms , the daily timing system consists of a body clock that is synchronized by external time-cues and that sends information to a variety of systems in the body and so produces daily rhythms in them .
5 My one criticism of SansAmp has always been the harshness of the top end ; the GX-7 certainly has less odd harmonics and so produces a distortion sound which is more pleasing to the ear .
6 Sign language is a particularly obvious stigmatising feature for the young deaf child , and so produces very negative feelings in the teacher ( as exemplified in appendix 1 ) , and thereby in those , such as parents , influenced by the education process .
7 In a sentence such as ( 1b ) not only does did situate its lexical supplement ( eat ) in time like any other auxiliary , but it also evokes all the time necessary to actualize the infinitive 's lexeme and so produces a representation of an event seen from beginning to end as something that really takes its place in time .
8 The eclecticism of the mid-nineteenth-century architects was of two types : either they applied different styles to different buildings , as did Burn or the Barrys , or they applied motifs derived from different styles to the same building and so produced an original design .
9 The advance of this critical period , however , can not easily be linked to the idea of a body clock which tends to run fast and so produce daily rhythms which are timed too early because , when daily rhythms have been investigated in these patients , it appears that daily rhythms are irregular , rather than altered in a particular direction .
10 Then , in Wisden 's delightful words , ‘ it was the turn of the three pace bowlers to wreak havoc and so produce a feeling of contentment in the minds of their colleagues for the Test series ahead ’ .
11 Apart from the firm belief that if workers and senior management were to pair and so produce a perfect working environment– all hope was placed in the children of the workers we spoke with .
12 Some , but not all , automatically roll back the source tape at the beginning of each edit to offset the backspace and so produce edits which are accurate to within one or two frames .
13 It may conflict with views discovered by the language learner in his environment and so produce a culture shock which has to be resolved .
14 Civilian reactors , designed to produce power , use their fuel for longer and so produce heavier isotopes , Pu and Pu .
15 Evidence from the results of parallel tests with questions differing only in the numbers used showed that test results for individuals can be variable and so produce misclassifications of mastery .
16 The elements of design and their interconnection into the process network are relatively easy to recognize and generalize , and so produce a common basis for all design activities .
17 Once unfurled , his wings beat aster than the female 's and so produce a higher hum .
18 Any Windows-based package can image its PostScript screen fonts onto a matrix printer and so produce a realistic ‘ proof ’ of what the document would look like it were to be output through a page printer or typesetter .
19 Where the offshore topography consists of deeper and shallower areas at right angles to the coast , incoming waves will be less retarded in the troughs and so produce divergences , while the shallower areas will be areas of convergence , submarine equivalents of the pattern of waves round headlands ( Fig. 8.7 ) .
20 It will also allow the validity and reliability of the national survey to be assessed and so produce a more accurate figure for the incidence and prevalence of known cases .
  Next page