We have no meanings for "so subject" in our records yet.
1 The melancholy to which Bretons are so subject took hold of me.
2 And without your muffler, you that are so subject to chills.
3 It is so new, and I am so subject to colds in my head.
4 Nowhere else, literally nowhere else, is a player's minutest fault so subject to scrutiny.
5 But he had done so subject to the burden of one very serious stipulation.
6 I am not so subject to vapours as you, child.
7 Why are they so subject to stomach and intestinal disorders?
8 Why are not old men so subject to the plague as young men and children?
9 No art form is so fleeting and so subject to the dictates of fashion as opera.
10 None are so subject except those belonging in the State, or actually taking part in the proceedings.
11 Very young people are not so subject to them; they have flurry, not worry- averydifferent thing.
12 I need have no misgivings as to Ethel's health, and she has always been so subject to chills.
13 But then, 'tis so subject to storms, 'tis no wonder the lover perished, and the bridge was broken.
14 But this tree or shrub is so subject to the attacks of a leaf-blight that the culture has decreased.
15 We do not wish to have our right to do so subject to the action of this or any other body.
16 Poor Mrs Bulteel is so subject to take cold from draughts, and I very nearly fell asleep while she was reading.
Other examples for "so subject"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: So subject across language varieties