Example sentences of "so [adv] [conj] [pron] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 She disliked the wretched man so intensely that she did n't care if she never had to see him again .
2 So presumably if they do n't get bids for those routes then they they ca n't do anything about it .
3 So rather than you going well on this nice question , and you could you could have done it and picked up
4 He embalmed a child in 1717 so skilfully that he deceived Peter the Great , who thought the infant was alive yet in a state of normal repose .
5 How could she spend Roman 's money so lavishly when she had just parted from her lover ?
6 I felt my parents ' anxieties about both their own and their children 's lives so keenly that they became my own , quite against my will , and I had to fight to reject them .
7 He attempted to plead insanity , but did it so effectively that they concluded he must be sane .
8 Now playing at inside-right , Whitworth was top scorer with 16 goals , but he also combined with Frank so effectively that we had a comfortable 2nd Division season , and then he headed our scoring chart again in 1924–25 .
9 That procedure became operative so effectively that I think the management subsequently realized that unless they had shop stewards who were capable of discussing the matter intently you know , and objectively , then they were on a loser , because they then stood to lose more productivity than hitherto .
10 The converter had worked so effectively that he suffered only mild carbon monoxide poisoning .
11 In subsequent correspondence Technical Division were asked to confirm that the timing of the provision of the benefit to the non-resident or non-domiciled beneficiary was irrelevant , ie that it did not matter whether the income in question was paid to him in the year of assessment in which it arose or in a subsequent year , but Technical Division refused to confirm that this was the case on the grounds that the actual circumstances of particular cases tended to vary so widely that they felt unable to answer the question without more details .
12 ‘ It would have to be a very small stone , but I would do so gladly if it binds you to me . ’
13 But the plains , savannahs , rivers and hills , all the way from Samburu down to the Masai Steppe , proved fruitful and the Masai built up their strength through the acquisition of women and cattle so successfully that they chased out the other tribes who were obliged to cling to the mountains or secrete themselves in the forests , land useless for cattle .
14 Thus the Free Presbyterians ( and other conservative Christians ) who picketed a newly opened sex shop on the Castlereagh Road in Belfast ( so successfully that it closed ) saw themselves , not as denying anyone their basic right to sin , but as preventing further incitement and encouragement to sin .
15 Vincent Canby in The New York Times felt that the film was often ‘ not terribly funny , at just those moments when it tries the hardest , and it sometimes wears its social concerns so blatantly that they look like warpaint ’ , but concluded that it ‘ is an important movie by one of our most interesting directors ’ .
16 Because she has not been caught either , or not so blatantly that one has had to stop pretending to look the other way .
17 In pharmaceuticals , firms can use the power of their technological oligopoly so blatantly that there has been a policy reaction by many governments .
18 For a while during the 1970s these counterurban tendencies were operating so powerfully that they replaced the North-South drift as a primary dimension of regional population change in Britain ( Champion , 1983 ) .
19 He could never trust his legs , especially when his shoes pinched so badly that they made his feet tingle and twitch with pins and needles .
20 One or two need to be kept on the cool side , otherwise they grow too fast and weaken themselves so badly that they die .
21 Before he could get to the specimen , its entrails had decomposed so badly that they had to be thrown away , so it was a gutted specimen that he eventually saw .
22 If at times Hope needed women to a point of desperate madness , so , at other times , he ached for wealth so badly that he heard his inner voice crooning for it , like the ululation of a gin-addicted street beggar , the sound suddenly there but as if never absent , an ancient and ineradicable longing .
23 The Collector 's hands trembled so badly that he had to rest the telescope on the shattered window sill .
24 But he was shaking so badly that he had to sit down and have a rest .
25 I think she undoubtedly added to the intrigue erm and difficulties of her court , erm one example , she was always getting people that she approved of , getting them plum jobs , and one example was one of the governors of Oxford , the most unpopular , one Sir Arthur Aston , who was so unpopular that he got attacked on the street , and then had to have a body guard paid for the city council , and then was curvetting on his horse in front of some ladies , and fell off and broke his leg so badly that he had to have it amputated , so from then on he had a wooden leg , erm that meant he had to stop being governor , and later on in the war , a countryman was coming into Oxford , and asked the sentinel ‘ who was governor still ’ , and by that time a friend of prince Rupert 's Sir William Leg was governor , and the answer was ‘ one Leg ’ , and the countryman 's reply was ‘ pox on him , is he governor still ? ’ .
26 He coughed so badly that he found his way to the bathroom and took some Liquafruta cough syrup .
27 Sir Henry Bessemer suffered so badly that he designed an anti-seasick steamer whose saloon was supposed to stay on an even keel even if the ship rolled .
28 She wanted to see him so badly that she felt physically bereft .
29 She had badly wanted him to kiss her , of course — so badly that she knew it simply must not happen …
30 She winced , the force of his brutal remark piercing through her like a sharp knife , the suggestion of other women hurting so badly that she realised with a sick sensation that she was jealous .
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