Example sentences of "so [that] " in BNC.

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1 This virus affects the body 's defence system so that it can not fight infection .
2 You are also asked to keep your church leaders informed of your involvement so that they can ensure you are adequately supported .
3 After every client visit you are asked to call the office so that you can report how the visit went .
4 If you have dividend or receive bank or building society interest on which tax has been paid , tax will have been deducted at source , and this will enable you to sign a Certificate of Deduction of Tax so that ACET can obtain the advantages of covenant giving .
5 You may in fact find that you do pay some tax in the UK If you have dividends or receive bank or building society interest on which tax has been paid , tax will have beed deducted at source , and this will enable you to sign a Certificate so that ACET can obtain the advantages of the Gift Aid scheme .
6 Some states even go to the trouble of having two switches , one a ‘ dummy ’ , so that everyone can say , ‘ it was n't me who actually killed him ’ .
7 Is the text or part of the text written so that a reader will benefit in a future encounter with a work of art ?
8 It is in the last hundred years or so that theories have been advanced to justify critical or art historical practice , the creation of such theories being made more urgent in the last fifty years by a struggle to establish and then uphold the status of art history as an academic discipline .
9 By the 1850s the tradition had declined , so that Baudelaire was seeking to give new life to a decayed literary genre .
10 These men were taste-makers , whose judgements were important ; but the time available to them for writing was limited by the demands of negotiation and administration , so that they tended to write essays more than books , catalogue entries rather than articles .
11 Gombrich 's scholarly work includes many papers on meaning and interpretation in the visual arts , so that the broad but thin scope of his story of art is instructive ; by writing a survey he inevitably limited himself to a narrow range of comment .
12 A powerful sitter may also impose a requirement that the portrait looks impressive , so that an amused spectator can look for traces of the consequent power struggle in a picture ; Queen Elizabeth I of England was as firm as the Emperor Augustus about the principle that a ruler 's actual appearance matters less than the imprint of authority .
13 The author has had time to consider and reflect , so that descriptions , interpretations and evaluations will have been carefully formulated .
14 More frequently work in different media is split up into specialist studies , so that although there are general studies of Gauguin 's work , there are also specialist monographs on his prints , and on his sculpture and ceramics .
15 His judgements were impressive nevertheless , so that some critics were reduced to agreeing with his conclusions while denying the validity of his system .
16 As the decades have gone by , scholarly work has piled up , so that this category of book has taken a larger , longer and much more expensive form than before .
17 Generally , art criticism connected with mixed and group exhibitions is commentary from outside , so that we shall return to them , with only this brief mention here , in the next chapter .
18 Private collections are examples of critical judgement in action , so that both their catalogues and the opinions expressed by collectors are worth consideration .
19 By other forms of reproduction an image may be more or less degraded , so that nothing can be learnt from them .
20 With the James , we are told who did it ; in the Ackroyd , the matted fellow who is the chief suspect is never very securely identified as the author of the crimes — it is almost as if the inspector could have done it : so that Ackroyd 's is an authorially uncertain work in which the authorship of its crimes is uncertain too .
21 The friend felt Levi had survived ‘ so that I could bear witness ’ .
22 The Special Squads were the Nazis ' ‘ most demonic crime ’ , representing ‘ an attempt to shift on to others — specifically the victims — the burden of guilt , so that they were deprived even of the solace of innocence ’ .
23 This seems an odd way of going about things , but the advising panels do carry a professional adviser so that talent is not merely being judged by local civil servants .
24 Drama training is under constant review through the accreditation system , so that standards are maintained and new developments assessed , and schools which may not be in the accredited list today may well be there soon .
25 If you can afford to , it 's generally best to spread your auditions around the drama schools so that you are seen more than once .
26 With well written characters the words fit and flow so that the actor can ride with ease , and the thoughts , no matter how disjointed , have a natural quality that is at once ‘ actable ’ .
27 Think out your actions so that they enhance the text .
28 They invent a few rules that do n't mean anything so that you can ruin your health trying to change them .
29 This thing here , which looks like a wooden club , is actually several pieces of particular wood cunningly put together in a certain way so that the whole thing is sprung , like a dance floor .
30 What we 're trying to do is to write cricket bats , so that when we throw up an idea and give it a little knock , it might … travel …
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