- Main Entry:
- 1so

- Pronunciation:
-
\ˈsō, especially before adjective or adv followed by “that” sə\
- Function:
- adverb
- Etymology:
- Middle English, from Old English swā; akin to Old High German sō so, Latin sic so, thus, si if, Greek hōs so, thus, Latin suus one's own — more at suicide
- Date:
- before 12th century
1 a: in a manner or way indicated or suggested <do you really think so> —often used as a substitute for a preceding clause <are you ready? I think so><I didn't like it and I told her so> b: in the same manner or way : also <worked hard and so did she> c: thus 1 <for so the Lord said — Isa 18:4(Authorized Version)> d: then, subsequently <and so home and to bed>2 a: to an indicated or suggested extent or degree <had never been so happy> b: to a great extent or degree : very, extremely <loves her so> c: to a definite but unspecified extent or degree <can only do so much in a day> d: most certainly : indeed <you did so do it> e: most decidedly : surely <I so don't believe you>3: therefore, consequently <the witness is biased and so unreliable>
usage The intensive use of so (sense 2b) is widely condemned in college handbooks but is nonetheless standard <why is American television so shallow? — Anthony Lewis> <the cephalopod eye is an example of a remarkable evolutionary parallel because it is so like the eye of a vertebrate — Sarah F. Robbins> <the kind of sterile over-ingenuity which afflicts so many academic efforts — Times Literary Supplement>. There is no stigma attached to its use in negative contexts and when qualified by a dependent clause <not so long ago> <was so good in mathematics that he began to consider engineering — Current Biography>. The denotation in these uses is, of course, slightly different (see sense 2a). Another emphatic use of so (sense 2e) has developed more recently and occurs mostly in informal contexts.