... so
From 
Gleb Hlebov@2:5023/24.4222 to 
All on Fri Nov 29 13:13:07 2024
 
 
Hi All,
I sometimes come across this kind of UK dialect, where they put "so" at
the end of the sentence. Like:
    Blan-blah, we did this then we did that, so.
    It didn't work out anyway, so.
    Or [basically any assertive sentence], so.
How does an american reader see it? Is it just some kind of UK English
or even a person's trait? I also found this on Quora:
======
Ending a phrase with "so" is as common as randomly dropping the word
"like" into a sentence, which is another quirk of language in Ireland.
Saying goodbye could be "Later so" or "Are we going for a pint, so?" It
can mean "then" or some suggest "eh".
======
Does this seem accurate?
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 planet to put it on?" -- Henry David Thoreau
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 * Origin: www.wfido.ru (2:5023/24.4222)