Example sentences of "and so [adv] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The fact that the regime has so quickly and so completely imploded in East Germany could risk a reunification of Germany almost by default before long , ’ one diplomat said .
2 With regard to the latter , it should be noted that many Glasgow deaf church members around that time were very religious and so strongly disapproved of drinking that they formed their own temperance Society , the Glasgow Mutual Improvement Society .
3 Jennies were smashed across Lancashire in 1769 and so strongly resisted in the West Country that their penetration in Wiltshire and Gloucestershire was limited before the early 1790s .
4 736 and so firmly reiterated in Makanjuola v. Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis is by invoking the decision of the Court of Appeal in Peach v. Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [ 1986 ] Q.B .
5 Certainly no other nineteenth-century artist was so widely studied and so differently interpreted by the painters of the succeeding age .
6 Floy thought they probably ought to be afraid themselves , because the Tree Spirits were so inHuman and so wild and so clearly filled with strange woodland magic that once they had finished with Balor they might very well turn to the two Renascians .
7 This was important , because it showed that it was not a protein , and so clearly differed from lysozyme .
8 The idea of ‘ theory ’ has now become so pervasive , so much a part of the terms of current debate , and so visibly incorporated into institutions , that I shall not resist using it .
9 Such a religious patterning of small communities reveals a ‘ Christendom fixed at the state of development suitable to a simple agricultural and piscatorial society ’ , and so imperfectly suited to the more complicated organization of modern society .
10 We will need to disclose your report to our opponents , and so please include in a covering letter any comments you may have about any contribution our client may have made to the accident as these do not necessarily have to be disclosed .
11 In Jane Austen 's writing allusions of this kind are so succinct , and so well integrated with dramatized events , that they can easily pass the reader by .
12 This is not so difficult in the tropical rainforest where the rainfall is so heavy and so well spread throughout the year that the centres of many plants are permanently filled with water .
13 It was the usual Friday get-together , the alcohol-free lager and prawn salad session in the pub over the road , well within range of bleeps and so heavily attended by relays of medical and senior nursing staff .
14 It will be argued in this chapter that their prideful belief in the capacity to influence , so vividly expressed and so evidently vindicated in Indirect Rule , led the British on to fatal experiment in more and more attenuated forms of imperial control .
15 Strange , is n't it , or perhaps not so strange , that the word is so much used by theoreticians and so little used by artists themselves ?
16 It can not exactly be ascribed as a right of the pupil , however , since he can not ensure that the other schools and so on ask for the record .
17 Whether I decide to be , for current purposes , pre-eminently a parent or a child , a woman , a teacher , a part-time seamstress , a member of the Patel family or caste , a Gujerati , a Briton or an Indian , a citizen of Leicester , a taxpayer , a chess player and so on depends upon the task in hand rather than some inherent singularity , for I can be all these things simultaneously and without discomfort .
18 A splendid Arctic picture with snowy mountains , icebergs and so on had as a centre-piece a small hole in the ice with a board saying , ‘ Danger ’ .
19 Phrases like ‘ Light of the World ’ , ‘ the Sun of Righteousness that setteth nevermore ’ and so on ran through my head without ceasing , and the mere sight of the sun was sufficient greatly to intensify this manic excitement under which I was labouring .
20 The transformations effected by the second Vatican Council of 1962–5 in liturgy , sacrament , scripture , and so on led to the accelerated decline of traditional rituals such as wakes and pilgrimages to local shrines .
21 No indemnity will be given for loss of cash , bank currency and so on listed in Clause 11(c) — a substantial limitation of liability .
22 Points are always joined by straight lines and so curved armholes , necklines and so on have to be built up gradually by plotting a series of closely positioned points .
23 Training schemes , recognized qualifications , professional institutes , salary negotiating machinery and so on have to be developed .
24 The rough timber , fencing , bamboo , reeds , thatch and so on used by farmers and primitive people may possibly amount to nearly as much again , but naturally , no records are available .
25 The vegetation of urban commons varies region by region , and so unwittingly contributes to local character in contrast with most urban landscapes .
26 Notice that by this argument , such changes are initiated from outside the organisms and so inevitably occur after the initiating event .
27 Neville Cardus wrote , ‘ Bradman did little that was more wonderful and so highly charged with his own force of character than his dazzling improvisation , his neck-to-nothing brilliance , in the face of the ruthless challenge of Jardine . ’
28 Goblins with nets receive a +1 initiative bonus and so always attack before club-armed Goblins .
29 I am not the only person who has had a tumultuous year , and I am immensley proud of the way the British face their problems and so often succeed despite them .
30 The safest course , in view of the Revenue 's Statement , must be either to complete the transfer ( if by agreement ) before the marriage is dissolved or to have the transfer made the subject of a court order and so usually fall within the provisions of s10(1) .
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