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Enchanted Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Word so

Good evening:

A law officer (B) is being talked about in a case that is held against her father.
A (a lawyer): B won't testify because of her integrity because you, the jury, won't believe that a loving daughter can be objective.
B (sitting in the court): I could so be objective.

How you understand the word "so"? is it an adjective or an adverb? the meaning?

Thanks,

Ench
  

Top answer

Hi, Good evening: A law officer (B) is being talked about in a case that is held against her father. A (a lawyer): B won't testify because of her integrity because you, the jury, won't believe that a loving daughter can be objective. B (sitting in the court): I could so be objective.

  • Hi, Good evening: A law officer (B) is being talked about in a case that is held against her father.
  • A (a lawyer): B won't testify because of her integrity because you, the jury, won't believe that a loving daughter can be objective.
  • B (sitting in the court): I could so be objective.
  • How you understand the word "so"?
  • is it an adjective or an adverb?
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2 Answers
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Hi,
Good evening:

A law officer (B) is being talked about in a case that is held against her father.
A (a lawyer): B won't testify because of her integrity because you, the jury, won't believe that a loving daughter can be objective.
B (sitting in the court): I could so be objective.

How you understand the word "so"? is it an adjective or an adverb? An adverb.
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Enchantedyou, the jury, won't believe that a loving daughter can be objective.
B (sitting in the court): I could so be objective.
This one may depend on the exact intonation of the words. I'm going to take an educated guess.

so
and too act as emphatic affirmative opposites of previous negations. Here, so is used

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