Example sentences of "of [noun pl] [verb] back [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | 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 . |
2 | The work of solicitors goes back to the 15th century and as time has gone on they have become increasingly influential . |
3 | But you must you must have been asked dozens of times to go back into the pop concert field ? |
4 | 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 . |
5 | An example of presentation infidelity , uncovered in our survey , was where companies showed a series of columns sloping back towards the right away from the common baseline of the X axis . |
6 | We were able to confirm the histories of families going back to the 19th century . |
7 | Put it in the pile of things to go back in the cupboards . ’ |
8 | We have a list of murders stretching back over the last two centuries for which you are responsible . ’ |
9 | One pair of curtains drawn back to the two outer corners of the bay will look attractive , but they will cut down the light from the side windows . |
10 | The choice would be whether to draw one pair of curtains to stack back on the walls beside the windows , thus exposing the corner , or to have two separate pairs of curtains that draw from the centre of each window and thereby cover the corner area with fabric . |
11 | Of course , stories of ex-smokers drifting back to the fold are commonplace . |
12 | 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 . |
13 | I paid a Hackney second-hand dealer £100 a few years ago for seven black plastic bags of documents dating back to the seventeenth century — the contents of tin trunks removed from the basement of a firm of solicitors . |
14 | It was proposed that the students of Torcy 's academy should be employed in making " a more complete and exact collection of peace-treaties " , with an accompanying commentary ; while the largest such enterprise hitherto , the Corps universel diplomatique du droit des gens of J. Dumont de Carlscroon ( twelve volumes : Amsterdam — The Hague , 1726 ) , an assembly of documents reaching back to the age of Charlemagne and drawn from sources all over Europe , was designed mainly as a help in policy-making and a kind of portable archive for the use of diplomats . |
15 | With a sniff a hyaena can perceive not only the here and now but , simultaneously , a whole series of events stretching back into the past . |