So and Such: 1 May Be Freely Copied For Personal or Classroom Use
So and Such: 1 May Be Freely Copied For Personal or Classroom Use
So and Such: 1 May Be Freely Copied For Personal or Classroom Use
We often use ‘so’ and ‘such’ to mean ‘very’ or ‘really’. It makes the sentence stronger and shows that
there is a high level of something.
We use ‘such’ before a noun or an adjective + a noun. If there is ‘a’ or ‘an’, it goes after ‘such’.
• She was such a beautiful woman (= she was a very beautiful woman).
• NOT: ‘she was a so beautiful woman’.
• NOT: ‘she was a such beautiful woman’.
• He got such a good time in the race (= he got a very good time in the race).
• It was such delicious food (= it was really delicious food).
• The children spoke such good French (= the children spoke really good French).
When we use ‘such’ directly with a noun, it’s often a noun that shows our opinion.
1 © www.perfect-english-grammar.com
May be freely copied for personal or classroom use.
We don’t use a word like ‘this’ or ‘those’ or ‘your’ or ‘his’ before ‘so’ and ‘such’. ‘So’ and ‘such’
come directly after the verb.
We can use ‘so … that …’ and ‘such … that …’ to show that there is a certain result. (We can’t use
‘very’ or ‘really’ in this way.)
• It was so cold that the pond froze (= because it was very cold, the pond froze).
• She felt so tired that she fell asleep on the train (= because she was very tired, she fell asleep
on the train).
• It was such an expensive meal that he didn’t spend any money for the rest of the month (=
because it was a very expensive meal, he didn’t spend any money for the rest of the month).
• They have such a lot of books that they need to store some of them in the garage (= because
they have really a lot of books, they need to store some of them in the garage).
We can drop ‘that’ when we use ‘so’ and ‘such’ in this way.
We can use ‘so’ and ‘such’ to mean ‘to this level’ or ‘as … as this’.
We use ‘so’ before ‘much / many / little / few’ with and without a noun. This shows that the amount is
really a lot or really little. As usual, we use a plural noun after ‘many’ and ‘few’ and an uncountable
noun after ‘much’ and ‘little’.
• I ate so much.
• I ate so much cake.
• He had so many.
2 © www.perfect-english-grammar.com
May be freely copied for personal or classroom use.
• He had so many books.
• Why did you eat so little?
• He had so few friends that he was very lonely.
We can use ‘such’ before ‘a lot (of)’. Again, such comes before ‘a’. (We sometimes see ‘such a little
+ noun’ but that is when ‘little’ is just a normal adjective: ‘this is such a little flat’.)
Here are a few more idiomatic uses of ‘such’ and ‘so’ that are slightly different.
• I’d never heard such music before. (= I’d never heard this kind of music before)
As such (formal) = in the normal meaning of the word. We usually use this in the negative (‘not as
such’)
• We’re not going to have dinner as such, but there will be plenty of snacks. (= we’re not going
to have a normal dinner, but …)
• A: Is Lucy your boss now? B: Not as such (= not exactly) but she does work for the same
company.
• A: We should get a film for tonight. B: Such as? (= please give an example of a film)
• Cities such as London are becoming more powerful politically (= cities like London ...).
3 © www.perfect-english-grammar.com
May be freely copied for personal or classroom use.
And such / and so on = and more similar things
• It was so big (= it was the size I’m showing you with my hands).
• There’s only so much time (there’s only a certain amount of time).
Or so = approximately
• I think there were fifty people or so at the party (= I think there were approximately fifty
people at the party).
4 © www.perfect-english-grammar.com
May be freely copied for personal or classroom use.