1. QUIZZES

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          Test your memory on these verbal firecrackers from the week of June 29 to July 5!
          Question 1 of 7
          anchorite

          Idioms for so

          Origin of so

          1
          before 900; Middle English; Old English swā; cognate with Dutch zoo, German so, Gothic swa

          synonym study for so

          10. See therefore.

          usage note for so

          5. The intensive so meaning “very or extremely” ( Everything's so expensive these days ) occurs chiefly in informal speech. In writing and formal speech, intensive so is most often followed by a completing that clause: Everything is so expensive that some families must struggle just to survive.
          19, 20. The conjunction so (often followed by that ) introduces clauses both of purpose ( We ordered our tickets early so that we could get good seats ) and of result ( The river had frozen during the night so people walked across it all the next day ). In formal speech and writing, so that is somewhat more common than so in clauses of purpose. Otherwise, either so or so that is standard.
          Like and, but1 , and or, so can occur as a transitional word at the beginning of a sentence: So all our hard work finally brought results. See also as1, and, but1.

          Definition for so (2 of 5)

          so2
          [ soh ]
          / soʊ /

          noun Music.

          Definition for so (3 of 5)

          Definition for so (4 of 5)

          s.o.

          seller's option.
          shipping order.

          Definition for so (5 of 5)

          S.O.

          Signal Officer.
          Special Order.
          Standing Order.
          Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020

          British Dictionary definitions for so (1 of 5)

          Word Origin for so

          Old English swā; related to Old Norse svā, Old High German sō, Dutch zoo

          usage for so

          In formal English, so is not used as a conjunction, to indicate either purpose (he left by a back door so he could avoid photographers) or result (the project was abandoned so his services were no longer needed). In the former case to or in order to should be used instead, and in the latter case and so or and therefore would be more acceptable. The expression so therefore should not be used

          British Dictionary definitions for so (2 of 5)

          so2
          / (səʊ) /

          noun

          music a variant spelling of soh

          British Dictionary definitions for so (3 of 5)

          so3

          the internet domain name for

          Somalia

          British Dictionary definitions for so (4 of 5)

          SO

          abbreviation for

          Somalia (international car registration)

          British Dictionary definitions for so (5 of 5)

          S.O.
          / baseball /

          abbreviation for

          strike out
          Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

          Idioms and Phrases with so

          so

          The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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