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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'so so so' is not grammatically correct, and it is not usually used in formal written English.
However, it would be acceptable to use it in informal written speech (e.g. conversations in a play script, informal emails etc). For example: "I was so so so excited to see the show last night!".
Exact(58)
It feels so, so, so, so good.
That's so, so, so great!
They are so, so, so determined.
I was so so so into it.
"So! So! So!" he bellowed.
(R N Afifah, resident for 4 years) "The traffic is just so so so so bad.
She finds New York "dirty and awful," but "so, so, so, so fun".
The selection is not perfect; Ford has included a grindingly self-conscious play as well as two long poems almost unreadable now, full of campy nonsense like "whoops-musicale (sei tu m'ami) ahhahahahaha / loppy di looploop" and "le bateleur! how wonderful / I'm so so so so so so so so so so happy," which sounds like Ezra Pound on happy pills.
"The expectations were so, so, so high," Mr. Malmsten said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com