We have no meanings for "so wedded" in our records yet.
1 Some are so wedded to the earth that slight elevation disturbs them.
2 These birds are so wedded to the water that they rarely fly.
3 It's not hard to see why central banks are so wedded to the Phillips curve.
4 They will not even think about it because they are so wedded to the licence fee.
5 He is so wedded to evil, that to do a good action would be to him a pain.
6 He had become so wedded to his gold that to lose it was like losing his heart's blood.
7 I'm not so wedded to petty graft that I would refuse something better in the way of a subsidy.'
8 Handel throughout life was so wedded to his art, that he cared nothing for the delights of woman's love.
9 Their respective duties, while they need defining anew, are so wedded that there is no room for serious difference.
10 They pressed him to rejoin his people, but he had become so wedded to savage life that he at first refused.
11 The old classicism and the new Christianity never so wedded as to produce either an adequate civic virtue or a great intellectual movement.
12 It's because I am so wedded to Labour and the achievements we have secured that I am compelled to expose this mortal danger.
13 It will be very sad, and she is so wedded to Exeter that I fear we shall not get her up to London.
14 We search for the "right" strategy and we can become so wedded to our strategy we think a different approach is wrong.
15 Fletcher became so wedded to the methods that had made his team successful that he refused to change them when they no longer worked.
16 I really wonder that so many women in the South favor slavery and that my mother was so wedded to it, and Dorothy now.
Other examples for "so wedded"
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This collocation consists of: So wedded through the time
So wedded across language varieties