Subsequently or soon afterward (often used as sentence connectors)
Sinónimos
Examples for "so"
Examples for "so"
1Progress on problem loans was far from adequate so far, he said.
2One problem: the company did so without a necessary State Department license.
3Certainly for my father, there were great times, good times, not-so-good times.
4Separately, Li said Geely's car sales look good so far this year.
5This brings to 41 the number of cases so far this year.
1Rising interest rates Good news on interest rates this week then?Eh, no.
2If the alcohol abuse stops, then the physical health problems will stop.
3Since then, however, the course has matured and become far more difficult.
4I'll answer a question and then you have to answer a question.
5Laurence did not answer immediately; then he said, No; thank you, Tenzing.
1I'll answer a question and then you have to answer a question.
2I thought for a moment, and then said, Of course I'll stay.
3Politicians used it, the media used it, and then football used it.
4Labour proposes negotiating a new deal and then holding another EU referendum.
5She thought for a moment, and then said: It happened to me.
1You need to look for great products and so on, he said.
2The Lords Proprietors; the eldest in age first, and so in order.
3This report was different, however, and so too was the minister's response.
4The council said No: area of outstanding natural beauty and so forth.
5Nothing is gained by violence and so much is lost, he said.
6Guns, the Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, and so on?
7Top of New York bestseller list, 300 million copies and so on.
8The powerful men have not said stop and so it simply continues.
9The children of Israel went in a crowd and so must we.
10We support that, and so does the great majority of our community.
11Another Italian job, another 37 points conceded and so Ireland stands still?
12The resulting product was slightly different, and so not subject to duties.
13Freedom of speech is there for a reason and so are consequences.
14Labor organizations multiply and become aggressive, and so capital organizes in self-defense.
15The younger sons of proprietors; the eldest first, and so in order.
16Union members feel the economic pinch and so they need wage increases.