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So when will people stop beginning every statement with "so"?
Penyiaran jaluran : Tom in London
Claudia Alvis
Claudia Alvis  Identity Verified
Peru
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Live and let live Sep 5, 2013

Tom in London wrote:

So I've only noticed this lately, and it seems to be getting worse.


 
T o b i a s
T o b i a s
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Science Friday Sep 5, 2013

Any other fans of NPR's Science Friday?

http://www.sciencefriday.com/

In order to appear as a guest on the show, you have to sign an agreement promising to begin the answer to each of Ira's questions "So . . ."


 
Giles Watson
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Live and let die Sep 5, 2013

"So Mr Bond, we meet again" (Mr Big strokes well-fed white voodoo cat while considering next fiendishly irritating viral idiom).

 
Joanna Wang
Joanna Wang  Identity Verified
Amerika Syarikat
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So, everyone says it, so? Sep 5, 2013

"So" is an informal, conversational word, used commonly in characteristic of or appropriate to ordinary or familiar conversation rather than formal speech or writing.

"So" can be used as adverb, interjection, adjective, pronoun, interjection, and used in Idioms . If we consider speaking as cooking, then "so" is salt.

So, are we good?



[Edited at 2013-09-05 20:33 GMT]


 
Phil Hand
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Use in moderation to prevent heart disease Sep 6, 2013

Joanna Wang wrote:

"so" is salt.

Very apt. Best used in the preparation of food, and should not be an obvious flavour during consumption.

Clearly it's just one of those things: so is being used as a "filler" like um. It's not an inherently bad thing, but not everyone has to like it.


 
Samuel Murray
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I heard this from Capita's people last year Sep 6, 2013

Tom in London wrote:
So I've only noticed this lately, and it seems to be getting worse.


The first time I've noticed someone starting literally every sentence with "so" was during last year's UK interpreter debacle, when both representatives of Capita (both fairly high up in the organisation) started practically every sentence with a long "So...", followed by a pause (but no "erm"), even when they were responding to questions that would not normally elicit a "so".


 
Samuel Murray
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Belanda
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Yes, but some people use "so" even when you wouldn't use such a word normally Sep 6, 2013

Joanna Wang wrote:
"So" is an informal, conversational word, used commonly in characteristic of or appropriate to ordinary or familiar conversation rather than formal speech or writing.

"So" can be used as [an] ... interjection.

So, are we good?


I suppose using "so" at the start of every sentence is an interjection. I noticed you used it only once, even though you wrote three sentences. When people use it (the way I've heard it), the voice doesn't go up but stays level, which makes them sound very uncertain of what they're saying.

OR:

So, I suppose using "so" at the start of every sentence is an interjection. So, I noticed you used it only once. So, even though you wrote three sentences. So, when people use it (the way I've heard it), the voice doesn't go up but stays level. So, which makes them sound very uncertain of what they're saying. So, some people really sound like that... and I don't think they realise just how uncertain they sound.


 
Elina Sellgren
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Finland
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So I've noticed.. Sep 6, 2013

I have noticed that myself, as a non-native speaker of English, I tend to use so a lot when I write a sequence of sentences that aim to explain a causal chain to someone. So I end up writing something like "The fact is that.. So that's why we need to do this.. So that's how it's done."

And when I notice the multiple so's, it's so difficult to find alternatives! And at the same time they feel so necessary in the sentences..


 
XXXphxxx (X)
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You'll like this one Sep 6, 2013

http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9644000/9644002.stm

 
Tom in London
Tom in London
United Kingdom
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TOPIC STARTER
Thanks Sep 6, 2013



THat was excellent - and hilarious. Thanks !


 
neilmac
neilmac
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Great! Sep 6, 2013

John Holland wrote:

So many questions, so little time?

So anyway, here's a video that I think might be relevant?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nvey4uiuLO4


Very funny and on the mark


 
Jennifer Forbes
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The Bard himself Sep 6, 2013

I agree that all these modish tics quickly become tedious and irritating, "so" included, but then they fade and die, to be succeeded by something else equally annoying.

However, Shakespeare himself did it at the end of his famous sonnet XVIII:

"So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee".

I know, his usage wasn't the same as the meaningless sentence-starting so.

Fight on,
Jenny


 
matt robinson
matt robinson  Identity Verified
Sepanyol
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Ahli (2010)
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Pues...nada. Sep 6, 2013

Love it!

 
neilmac
neilmac
Sepanyol
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So shut up Sep 6, 2013



Methinks the gentleman from the beeb doth protest too much. Especially when their 6 Music channel has one presenter (I think it's either Radlicffe or Maconie) whose "er... ums" are notorious. After all, the much-maligned "so" is just a filler. The same thing happens in Spanish with "Pues..." and if you really want a breather before speaking, "Pues mira..." also does the trick.

[Edited at 2013-09-06 10:38 GMT]


 
mjbjosh
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Again Oct 22, 2013

So, again this is nothing unique. More and more French speakers start their sentences by alors, Germans by also, Latvians by tātad, etc. Probably there is some common denominator.

 
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So when will people stop beginning every statement with "so"?






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