Example sentences of "so [adv] [pron] be " in BNC.
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1 | The blow could n't have been self-inflicted , so presumably it 's murder , or manslaughter , or some peculiar accident . |
2 | He said he 's back on the road so presumably he 's erm |
3 | So presumably he 's actually believing these ideas I mean I would 've thought he , he if he came back and said there 's tension , there 's , you know it was , between the two classes and we go in and we direct them in a certain way , put the right ideas in their mind , that we can harness the revolution . |
4 | There were no stripes on his jacket so presumably he was a constable . |
5 | So eventually you 're going to have to sit down with us and tell us how much you want . |
6 | So somewhere there 's a big party and o or somebody who wants three or four crackers and put their own gifts in . |
7 | So effectively we 're paying , whilst we never use the typing pool or the plan print room , we 're paying a proportion of those costs on a per capita basis |
8 | The charge will be two pounds a day , which will include their meal , for which they already pay erm I think it 's ninety p at the moment , so effectively it 's an increase of a pound and ten p . |
9 | Younger males who have no harems also form groups without young or females , and so effectively there are two kinds of group : the one-male group and the multi-male group . |
10 | So mostly it is wise to direct the child to the subject . |
11 | So mostly it 's trumpets . ’ |
12 | As the ditches smell so badly we are obliged to keep the north windows shut … ‘ |
13 | Ignoring Matilda , he turned to his son and said , ‘ I 'm always glad to buy a car when some fool has been crashing the gears so badly they 're all worn out and rattle like mad . |
14 | He beat them so badly there was hardly a bone left unbroken in either of their bodies . |
15 | UNEMPLOYED Sandra Davies wants a job so badly she is tramping the streets at dawn pushing applications through letter-boxes . |
16 | Waldron wanted forward fluidity so badly he was prepared to forgo scrummaging power and the result , particularly as shown in Welsh humiliation by New South Wales and Australia last summer , was chaos . |
17 | ‘ Had a bust-up in the late fifties when he beat her up so badly he was sent to jail . ’ |
18 | But he wanted that job so badly he was willing to kill for it . |
19 | We get people on the programme singing and dancing so badly it 's painful , but they come back the next week and tell us that everyone 's stopping them in the streets to congratulate them , not slag them off . ’ |
20 | I know I 'll regret this in the morning , but I want you so badly it 's a risk I 'll just have to take . |
21 | One had mange so badly it was nearly bald : it moped around , scratching the exposed pink skin that had cracked and flaked where it stretched briefly over the jutting spine and ribcage . |
22 | Then we realised that she 'd had diarrhoea so badly it was actually oozing out of her collar ! |
23 | And , while she was chewing on that , suddenly some fierce Czech expletive rent the air , then , ‘ Hell , did you have me fooled ! ’ he raged , and when she had been certain that his fury was wholly on account of her pretending to be a journalist when she was not , he proceeded to throw her thinking totally out of gear when , his face whiter than ever , ‘ You wanted that interview so badly you were even ready to commit adultery to get — ’ |
24 | My hand was shaking so badly I was afraid I 'd drop the knife . |
25 | As curtain goes up , my hands are shaking so badly I 'm in grave danger of flight . |
26 | Since the Brownings ' present had paid the year 's rent and since she had managed the household so economically there was an actual income , growing monthly , from the boarders , upon which they could live . |
27 | The players respond so slowly it 's like playing via satellite , and they jump about 300 feet into the air to head the ball ! |
28 | So apparently they were ‘ popular ’ , for different reasons , with both Christian and native American , with oppressor and oppressed . |
29 | they 've , they 've got to put their National , National Ins Insurance stamps , erm , none of the Tax that they 'd stopped from their wages had been paid to the tax man , so apparently there was I do n't see how they 've already paid their employer , |
30 | So perhaps they are less vulnerable to the dangers of buying now without counting the cost of paying later . |