Example sentences of "are [verb] back to the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Some of those contributions are channelled back to the Church Commissioners for distribution .
2 The sound waves bounce off objects in their path and are reflected back to the dolphin where they are channelled through oil-filled sinuses in the lower jaw to the inner ear .
3 But meanwhile many Japanese eyes are turning back to the root cause : policy co-ordination and America .
4 PHYSICS lecturers are going back to the nursery to teach toddlers in the water tub while admissions tutors consider the merits of palm-reading and astrology for selecting students at Newcastle Polytechnic .
5 THE enthusiastic housekeeper will no doubt be pleased to hear that the carpet retailers are going back to the twist .
6 De Klerk said his visit showed South Africa and the world that " we are moving back to the fold " .
7 Some are seeking independence and freedom from family or institutional repression ; some are escaping from problems or abuse whether at home , within the family , or at school ; some are running back to the family and away from care authorities .
8 More children are coming back to the library to work because teachers give the initial push by bringing them …
9 And with that slice of humour , we are brought back to the present .
10 But if that is put on one side we are brought back to the question of what kinds of determining factors Poulantzas invokes in order to explain what actually happens .
11 The answer to his first point is that it is absolutely clear that a number of people who break their bail conditions are remanded in custody when they are brought back to the court ; but that happens in only about six out of 10 cases , and in four out of 10 cases when those who break their bail conditions are brought back to the court , it seems that they are no longer remanded in custody but are again let out on bail .
12 The answer to his first point is that it is absolutely clear that a number of people who break their bail conditions are remanded in custody when they are brought back to the court ; but that happens in only about six out of 10 cases , and in four out of 10 cases when those who break their bail conditions are brought back to the court , it seems that they are no longer remanded in custody but are again let out on bail .
13 To answer this question we are led back to the idea of big gassy planets like Jupiter spitting out small rocky ones like Venus , which then play a sort of cosmic billiards before settling down .
  Next page