Example sentences of "so i " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ So me and Gloria , we wo n't be seeing Baby no more , ’ Dot said firmly . |
2 | Well ! well , well ; an' so me young Robbie 's gone an' done it . |
3 | Dave Brock used to go onstage in a lab-coat , so me and me mates used to finish school and still wear our lab-coats everywhere . |
4 | But so me were there in earnest support of that cause . |
5 | Me dad still used to batter us , so me and me brothers and sisters all got put back into care . |
6 | It 's quite big , so me and my two sisters have all got our own rooms . |
7 | Her daughters have however been contacted so I agree to keep her company until they arrive . |
8 | It 's pretty lightweight , most of it and what is n't lightweight is salacious , so I would n't think you 'd find much to stimulate you there , but you could try . |
9 | You do n't believe me , so I suggest you go out to bat with this and see how you get on . |
10 | I had n't done ‘ drama ’ at school , thank God , so I was completely open coming straight from school . |
11 | And that got me into the last three so I had to do it all again at the Barbican which I think was to see if I could fill that theatre with enough presence and vocal range . |
12 | As an auditionee I knew I worked best if I attempted something outrageous so I prepared Lord Foppington from The Relapse and you just have to let go with his Lordship otherwise there 's no point to it . |
13 | I was told there was an acting scholarship going and I was broke so I took an audition and by a marvellous chance , won the scholarship . |
14 | As I left I asked Marcus to remove his dark glasses so I could look at his face . |
15 | ‘ So I would n't last five minutes in a ‘ proper ’ kitchen ! ’ |
16 | And then Woodleigh 's secretary even came out last week , so I gather . |
17 | ‘ Good lord , so I am . ’ |
18 | ‘ But I woke up in the middle of the night and could n't get back to sleep , so I decided to bake a cake , after all . |
19 | I hardly had anything in the cupboard so I had to make do … |
20 | ‘ I could n't find the words to tell Dorothy , so I said it was a wrong number . |
21 | You had n't told your wife about it , so I thought it was probably bad news , and that it might have upset you enough to — well , to do something . |
22 | A silence followed that , so I sneaked another look . |
23 | Father 's study was locked , so I dashed to the kitchen . |
24 | However , my presence was clearly unsettling its regular inhabitants so I decided it was time to make a move — and time to confront Charles Howard . |
25 | I was now at a bit of a loss as to what to do next , so I wandered upstairs to the room that housed the books covering my subject , just to check up on a few things . |
26 | It was a book of photographs of London between the wars — a slightly tactless gesture as I was only eleven when World War Two was declared , but the sentiments were , I sensed , sincere , so I was touched by their kindness . |
27 | The new flat was smaller than the old so I had to sell some of my furniture . |
28 | The headmaster was getting a little too close to the bone for my liking , so I decided to go on the defensive . |
29 | I was acutely aware of the urgent need to find some work to do , so I combed the national and local newspapers to see what was on offer . |
30 | It seemed about par for the course , so I applied , was interviewed and then offered the job , all in reasonably quick time . |