Example sentences of "so it [is] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 And so it is planned to continue , year by year , until the entire national curriculum is in place by the end of 1997 .
2 So it is getting cheaper for carriers to connect their large customers via ISDN rather than leased lines or conventional analogue links .
3 IR radiation with wavelengths between 5 and 15 m is sensed as heat and so it is called the thermal infrared region .
4 So it is written
5 In doing so it is intended to make a significant contribution to information for policymakers .
6 So it is cut to the finest as far as the females are concerned .
7 GOLD HAS always been the ultimate store of value — and so it is proving here today .
8 The lure of Tinseltown and the magic dollar was always going to prove irresistible to someone as unashamedly ambitious as Kylie , and so it is proving .
9 So it is proving to be with the National Curriculum .
10 Moreover I have given order that they who collect my dues take from you no more than the tenth , because so it is appointed by the custom of the Moors , and it is what ye have been wont to pay .
11 If it fails to do so it is condemned as being ‘ reformist ’ , or ‘ liberal ’ or even ‘ racist ’ .
12 Or so it is hoped .
13 So it is hoped that ALL PARISHES in the Middlesbrough area will try to send a representative to the meeting on 9th December .
14 The capital of Finnish Lappland is Rovaniemi , home of Father Christmas — or so it is said — and a town that easily overcomes the embarrassment of having everything but the airport lying south of the Arctic Circle .
15 So it is said . "
16 The stories originate from Terra , the birthplace of mankind , or so it is said .
17 ( Although in Trob the last word in fact became ‘ a thing which may happen but once in the usable lifetime of a canoe hollowed diligently by axe and fire from the tallest diamondwood tree that grows in the noted diamondwood forests on the lower slopes of Mount Awayawa , home of the firegods or so it is said . ’ ) .
18 The , the importance of this , is that Freud is often said to have been a Hobbesian thinker , in the sense that , er without necessarily being directly influenced by Hobbes , he took a similar , a similar kind of view , or at least , so it is said .
19 Or so it is reported .
20 So it is used here in the wider sense defined by the World Health Organization as a ‘ complete physical , mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity ’ .
21 So it is used mainly for brief shots or parts of shots , or for very special effects — perhaps the most familiar being the laser swords in the Star Wars series .
22 So it is described in Tess of the d'Urbervilles , yet , seen from the downs , it is The Woodlanders , Hardy 's own favourite story , which first comes to mind .
23 The worry is that the jury can not be made to abide by directions of this kind , and so it is alleged that , if no evidential weight attaches to the refusal to answer , it would be better to exclude it altogether than to run the risk .
24 Hitachi Ltd and Toshiba Corp say they will step up their production of 4M-bit memory chips shortly in response to recovery in the US market : Hitachi intends to boost monthly output by July to 8m from the current 7.5m and as it is near capacity will have to get more of them from Goldstar Co ; Toshiba said it would raise monthly output to between 6m and 7m by September from the 5m or so it is doing right now .
25 Many of these plateaus have anomalous crustal thicknesses of between 20 and 40 km and an upper layer 10 to 15 km thick with P-wave velocities in the range 6.0–6.3 km s-h These values are in the range of granitic rocks in the continental crust and so it is inferred that many oceanic plateaus ( such as the Seychelles Bank ) are drowned continental fragments originating from the edges of ancient land masses and destined to be swept towards a subduction zone in the future .
26 The blood of childbirth and menstruation , which follows a passive and unstoppable cycle , can be construed ( by the powers that be ) to fall within this category , and so it is required that cultural regulation step in with restrictive legislation .
27 So it is reassuring to recognise that London is not alone .
28 One of the advantages of this approach , or so it is claimed , is that it enables governments to pursue policies based upon consent and voluntary cooperation and thereby to avoid both the ‘ law of the jungle ’ ( monetarism ) and the ‘ jungle of the law ’ ( statutory incomes policies ) .
29 So it is supposed .
30 None of the crossing out , handwriting , org organizing my homework so it is handed in on time
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