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So   /soʊ/   Listen
So

adverb
1.
To a very great extent or degree.  "Never been so happy" , "I love you so" , "My head aches so!"
2.
In a manner that facilitates.  "He stooped down so he could pick up his hat"
3.
In such a condition or manner, especially as expressed or implied.  "So live your life that old age will bring no regrets"
4.
To a certain unspecified extent or degree.  "Can do only so much in a day"
5.
In the same way; also.  "Worked hard and so did she"
6.
In the way indicated.  Synonyms: thus, thusly.  "Set up the pieces thus"
7.
(usually followed by 'that') to an extent or degree as expressed.  "So dirty that it smells"
8.
Subsequently or soon afterward (often used as sentence connectors).  Synonyms: and so, and then, then.  "Go left first, then right" , "First came lightning, then thunder" , "We watched the late movie and then went to bed" , "And so home and to bed"
9.
(used to introduce a logical conclusion) from that fact or reason or as a result.  Synonyms: hence, thence, therefore, thus.  "The eggs were fresh and hence satisfactory" , "We were young and thence optimistic" , "It is late and thus we must go" , "The witness is biased and so cannot be trusted"
10.
In truth (often tends to intensify).  Synonym: indeed.  "It is very cold indeed" , "Was indeed grateful" , "Indeed, the rain may still come" , "He did so do it!"
noun
1.
The syllable naming the fifth (dominant) note of any musical scale in solmization.  Synonyms: soh, sol.



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"So" Quotes from Famous Books



... if at all, to the "Protestant ascendency," nor yet to the alleged superiority of the Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the seventeenth century Limerick was more important than Cork, whereas it had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained 5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, ...
— Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2) (1888) • William Henry Hurlbert

... epilogue to the third book certainly appears to mean that during the course of the translation, in order to fulfil his promise of multiplying copies, he had learned to print. He might easily have done so in the six months during which he remained in Cologne, or during his stay in Ghent. That it was in Cologne rather than elsewhere, is confirmed by the oft-quoted stanza added by Wynkyn de Worde as a colophon to the English edition ...
— A Short History of English Printing, 1476-1898 • Henry R. Plomer

... so successful, so easy, and so formidable, shall be changed, whether it shall be changed at a time when the whole continent is in commotion, and every nation calling soldiers to its standard; when the French, recovered from their defeats, seem to have forgotten the force of that hand that ...
— The Works of Samuel Johnson, Vol. 10. - Parlimentary Debates I. • Samuel Johnson

... some Tzigana musicians, whom the Prince had sent for, arrived at the castle. Marsa felt invigorated when she heard the czimbalom and the piercing notes of the czardas. She had been longing for those harmonies and songs which lay so near her heart. She listened, with her hand clasped in that of Andras, and through the open window came the "March of Rakoczy," the same strains which long ago had been played in Paris, upon the boat which bore them down ...
— Prince Zilah, Complete • Jules Claretie

... cow, to especial beatitude—the object of veneration being a lingam of black stone enshrined in a temple, the guardianship of which is jointly vested in five resident families of Bramins. "At this time," says the colonel, "the place is not worth keeping, the country being so thoroughly impoverished and desolate;" and he accordingly, after viewing the marvels of the locality, pursued his way to Banda, and thence laid a dak (or travelled by palanquin with relays of bearers) to Calpee, "there to ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 341, March, 1844, Vol. 55 • Various


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