Find the word definition

Wiktionary
so much

a. great in quantity, degree etc. adv. To a certain degree or extent n. A particular amount, often a large or excessive amount.

WordNet
so much

adj. of so extreme a degree or extent; "such weeping"; "so much weeping"; "such a help"; "such grief"; "never dreamed of such beauty" [syn: such(a)]

Wikipedia
So Much

So Much may refer to:

  • "So Much" (song), a 2010 single by Raghav featuring Kardinal Offishall
  • "So Much", a song by The Sundays on their album Static & Silence
So Much (song)

"So Much" is a 2010 single by Indo-Canadian singer Raghav featuring Canadian hip hop artist Kardinal Offishall and produced by Labrinth from Raghav's third album entitled The Phoenix. "So Much" was released on the record label Cordova Bay and was a Top 40 feature on many Canadian mainstream music stations. and at MuchMusic pan-Canadian music station. It is also available on iTunes.

This is not the first collaboration by the two artists. They had collaborated earlier on the track "Sooner or Later" featuring vocals by Kardinal Offishall, which is included on Raghav's debut 2004 album Storyteller.

Usage examples of "so much".

If they pulled in a fifty-pound king while they were at it, or took down a caribou with a double shovel rack, so much the better.

Suddenly there seemed so much to know for the scare to work that she began to doubt if she could do it.

So was the sight of John Gillman standing at the top of the ridge, He was carrying a rifle loosely in one arm, and she knew if they so much as moved he only had to raise the rifle and pull the trigger.

She had never experienced sexual pleasure other than fleetingly and tenuously in those early days of their courtship, when Julian had teased her with kisses that promised so much and yet in the end meant so very little.

Perhaps that was why Neii Saxton suddenly t seemed so much taller than she remembered, she thought as she opened the door to him and he !

No, it was not his desire to possess her home and land that intimidated her so much where Neil Saxton was concerned, it was the man himself.

Her arms ached so much, she felt as though the muscles were on fire, as though they were being relentlessly torn from their sockets.

She was trembling so much that she could hardly move, her heart thudding painfully against the wall of her chest.

He knew it was the same sky that he had seen growing up in the city, but he could see so much more of it above the flat terrain of the northern prairie.

No wonder the youths liked him so much, she thought as she opened her door.