Example sentences of "[noun pl] go back [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But you must you must have been asked dozens of times to go back into the pop concert field ?
2 But his eyes went back to the Workshops and he frowned and sought for the right thing to say .
3 The two brothers went back into the Guild Office , and Ebenezer began to gasp and splutter , telling his story as best he could : what Florrie had said to him about Tom 's letter and what Tom had threatened to do … .
4 Perhaps the biggest problem with the Severin thesis is that recent work in Mesoamerican archaeology , and the deciphering of Mayan hieroglyphic codes , make it clear that the classic Mayan civilisation ( AD300 to AD900 ) had precursors going back to the Olmecs in 1000BC and earlier .
5 When engineers go back to the drawing board and create a new design , they do not necessarily throw away the ideas from the old design .
6 But once record companies went back on the sales offensive the new pop was easily coopted .
7 But erm you know when we were on the strike if these lads would n't have gone back , there was couple of scabs went back into the quarry .
8 Its origins go back to the rediscovery of perspective in the Renaissance , and then to the architect 's drawings of the eighteenth century .
9 As a matter of principle , the bank in such circumstances should not be entitled to rely on the transaction and this is the view which has been taken by a series of authorities going back to the beginning of this century .
10 Despite the fact that spiders are all over the place in Dostoevsky , not just in Svidrigailov 's dirty bathhouse vision of Eternity , and that urban potted plants go back to the beginning in Poor People , we are here firmly inside Crime and Punishment in its abandoned first-person narrative form ( ‘ I am on trial and will tell all ’ ) : Petersburg evenings and their hanging summer light , noises from below , happy workmen , blessed ‘ living life ’ elsewhere , a lonely man in pain passing through gates , over thresholds , slipping up and down staircases , the buzzing By of Raskolnikov 's dream and his awakening , intense time-consciousness alternating with time-oblivion .
11 With Sophie back behind much stronger bars , the intrepid PCs went back to the school yesterday to claim their reward chocolate coins .
12 She called them girls but many were women whose working days went back to the Utility dresses and khaki battle-dress .
13 Put it in the pile of things to go back in the cupboards . ’
14 Would you believe it — a false start and the man with the red flag is there to make sure all the eggs go back to the line .
15 The retirement of Sergeant Merrey marked the end of another era — not only the departure of a friend and character , but the last of a long line of School Sergeants going back to the appointment of Sgt. Sash in 1888 .
16 Before the patients go back to the ward , they will pat their faces back into place and often ask for reassurance that no-one will be told .
17 ‘ But the difference now is that the profits go back into the game and the WRU are to be congratulated on their decisions to tap in to the funds that are available . ’
18 Of course , the challenge is when people who are sensitised to their own attitudes go back into a work or social setting where people are not .
19 At this point the straw bolsters go back into the windows and the outer door is shut and locked .
20 Champs ' plans go back in the melting pot
21 Julia was so interested in the cross-examination that she almost disobeyed Anthony 's instructions to go back to the Campo San Maurizio for lunch and spend the afternoon in bed , but , remembering how weak she had felt the previous evening , she did as he said .
22 Others , being anciently established , also have manuscript materials going back to the days of their foundation in the Middle Ages or the Tudor period .
23 It has , of course , been a problem with star conductors going back to the time of Nikisch that the conductor can come to seem more charismatic than the music he is conducting .
24 It was a culmination of measures going back to the middle of the nineteenth century , but more particularly government experience since the 1890s. and above all , a shift in attitudes towards State-provided housing .
25 These are abused young children going back to a parent and troubled adolescents returning home from residential care .
26 The children went back to the rocks and the two men never referred to them again .
27 Last year the police went back to the Baroness 's former home to look in vain for hidden gold bars .
28 Rather than launch into these discussions with yet another set of theories , the aim of teaching in the New Testament department is to help students to go back to the verses and passages themselves for new insights and new understanding .
29 It has records going back to the reign of Henry II in about 1165 .
30 Even Nutty could see what an apathetic beast he was , and her heart contracted suddenly at the thought of their four stupid old horses going back to the knacker 's .
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