Click here to review the information about 'so' and 'such' Click here to download this exercise in PDF Hello! I'm Seonaid!I'm here to help you understand grammar and speak correct, fluent here to read more about our learning method
Gloryais such an angel for us! She's so kind, don't you dare to hurt her! (Glorya adalah sosok malaikat bagi kami! Dia sangat baik, jangan berani untuk menyakiti dia!) Your room is such a mess! You should clean it right now. (Kamarmu sungguh berantakan! Kamu harus merapihkannya sekarang) Penerapan such dengan judgemental noun So - The Coordinating ConjunctionMost students know how to use 'so'. It is a coordinating conjunction, which means it can join two independent clauses. It is used to show cause & effect result. For exampleI was hungry, so I printer was broken, so we couldn't use it.[cause], so [effect]So has a meaning of 'therefore' here except 'therefore' is not a conjunction.So that - The Subordinating ConjunctionSo that has a meaning similar to 'in order to/in order that'. It describes the purpose of an action. It begins a subordinate clause a clause that is dependent on a main clause. For exampleThe teacher spoke slowly so that his students would understand the his students understanding the lesson is the purpose/aim of the action of speaking slowly. It is not the result. In this sentence, we don't know the result. We only know that he spoke slowly for the purpose of helping them are some more examplesShe exercises so that she can lose weight. this is her purpose for exercisingWe should recycle so that our children can enjoy our planet in the future. purpose, not effectThe Confusing Part 'That' is optional in 'So that'You can say either of theseShe exercises so that she can lose weight. purposeShe exercises so she can lose weight. purposeThe word that is talk about purposesoso thatTo talk about a result effectsoIn other words, anytime you can say 'so that', you can also shorten it to 'so'. However, you cannot use 'so that' if you are talking about the effect result of an action you can only use so. For exampleIt was cheap so that I bought it. we are talking about the result, not purposeWhat's the answer here?1. The movie was boring, _______ we stopped watching it. show answer2. She is studying Spanish ______ she can communicate when she moves to Spain next year. show answerI made this page so that you can understand the difference between these two some more exercises on the difference between so and so that Exercises So vs. So thatIn these exercises, choose between 'so' as a coordinating conjunction used for cause and effect, and 'so that' as a subordinate conjunction used to show piano was heavy we needed two people to move one invited him to the party he didn't painting our house it will look better. the children would listen, the teacher raised her am a man I am not a hired a cleaner our house is clean hired a cleaner our house would be clean for the you have any questions, please leave a comment Matthew Barton / Creator of ESL B Pola Such That. Pola: Such + noun/ noun phrase (adjective + noun) + that + clause. Catatan: Such dan that mengapit noun (kata benda) atau bisa juga mengapit noun phrase yang terdiri dari adjective + noun (kata sifat + kata benda). Setelah kata that, maka diikuti oleh clause yang merupakan kalimat. Kalimat terdiri dari subject dan verb.– Dalam kalimat bahasa Inggris, kita pasti pernah menemukan kata-kata seperti so…that dan such…that. Apakah kalian mengetahui cara penggunaannya? Menurut BBC Learning English, so dan such bisa digunakan dengan klausa that untuk menunjukkan sebab akibat cause-effect. Sedangkan so dan such sendiri “indicate degree” atau menunjukkan derajat, maksudnya derajat dari suatu hal yang berarti “sangat”. Perhatikan kalimat berikut I was so tired that I could barely wake up. / Aku sangat lelah sampai aku hampir tidak bisa bangun. It is such a delicious cake that I want to buy more. / Kue ini sangat enak sehingga aku ingin membeli lebih banyak lagi. Dari kedua contoh di atas, kita bisa menyimpulkan bahwa perbedaan antara keduanya terletak pada susunan katanya. Baca juga Contoh Dialog Cause, Effects, and Contrast Pada kalimat pertama, kalimatnya “I was so tired that…”. Sebelum kata that, kita akan menemukan adjective. Sedangkan di kalimat kedua, “It is such a delicious cake that…”, di mana sebelum kata that kita akan menemukan noun yang di depannya terdapat adjective adjective + noun. Selain adjective, untuk so…that kita juga bisa menggunakan adverb. Berikut contoh kalimat yang lain The weather is so hot that I don’t want to go anywhere. / Cuacanya sangat panas sehingga aku tidak ingin pergi ke mana pun. We had such a difficult exam that we didn’t want to see the question sheet again. / Kami menghadapi ujian yang sangat sulit sehingga kami tidak ingin melihat lembar soalnya lagi. There are so many graduates wearing gowns and caps that I can't find where my sister is. / Ada banyak lulusan yang memakai jubah dan toga sehingga aku tidak bisa menemukan di mana kakakku berada. Today is such a boring day that I only lay all day. / Hari ini hari yang sangat membosankan sehingga aku hanya rebahan seharian. It was such a funny TV show that I couldn’t stop laughing. / Itu adalah acara TV yang sangat lucu sehingga aku tidak bisa berhenti tertawa. Elisa picked so many strawberries that she couldn’t eat all of them. / Elisa memetik banyak sekali stroberi sehingga ia tidak bisa memakan semuanya. Baca juga Contoh Dialog Cause and Effect Dapatkan update berita pilihan dan breaking news setiap hari dari Mari bergabung di Grup Telegram " News Update", caranya klik link kemudian join. Anda harus install aplikasi Telegram terlebih dulu di ponsel.
Adapunin order that yang merupakan idiom yang berarti "so that something can happen" (agar sesuatu dapat terjadi) lebih formal (more formal) daripada so that. Selain untuk menunjukkan tujuan dari sesuatu, so that juga dapat digunakan untuk menunjukkan akibat dari sesuatu (to show the result of something).
"Such that" is idiomatic mathematical jargon most often used in the definition of mathematical objects. The usage in your example is a bit atypical. The phrase is difficult to directly gloss, but one possible rendering for the phrase as it is used in definitions is "...for which it is true that..." For example, if we define a rational number as "any p/q such that p and q are integers and q≠0," we've established that iff there are two integers that can be divided by one another to produce a given number, then that number is rational. Your example is a bit different, because it isn't directly defining a mathematical object, but rather describing a transformation on a mathematical object. Some branches of mathematics would allow you to define transformations as objects, but that isn't what's being done here. By contrast, the phrase "so that" is not mathematical jargon; it's a common-use phrase that indicates the intent or result of some action or condition. Consider the following examples "I drank coffee so that I could stay awake." "I drank coffee such that I could stay awake." These sentences are very different! The former sentence is saying that your reason for drinking coffee was to stay awake - in order to stay awake, you drank coffee. The latter sentence is describing the coffee, not your action of drinking the coffee, saying that it's coffee that you drank before a period of time when you were able stay awake, and suggesting that the coffee had something in it that kept you awake. Note also that the meaning of the sentence changes yet again when a comma is added as follows "I drank coffee, such that I could stay awake." In this case, the phrase "such that" modifies the entire clause in a similar manner to "so that", except it describes the result of your action of drinking the coffee rather than your reason for drinking the coffee. For one reason or another, you drank coffee, and because you drank that coffee, you were able to stay awake. If you ever see the phrase "such that" used outside of mathematics, it will probably be used like this following a clause, separated from that clause by a comma, and describing the result of whatever is happening in that clause. Your example seems to be using the phrase in this sense, such that the sentence should probably have a comma between "sheared" and "such that". In particular, this usage often connotes extent, that the preceding clause is true to an extent that results in whatever's going on in the following clause - you drank enough coffee to stay awake. This connotation is especially strong if the preceding clause uses some word or phrase that itself describes extent, as in "I drank lots of coffee, such that I could stay awake." khY1Eh.