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

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1 The failure of the revolution in Europe , together with events in China and elsewhere , forced the colonial issue back on to the agenda at the Fourth ( 1922 ) , Fifth ( 1924 ) and Sixth ( 1928 ) Comintern Congresses .
2 Why has it taken so long to bring interconnection back on to the agenda ?
3 He wrapped this and the fat-soaked bread in sheets of clean newspaper taken from the bathroom , then climbed back on to the stool to see what else he could find .
4 Perhaps the train in Aunt Louise 's mind had jumped back on to the rail for a while because it was then , in quite a conversational voice , that she began to speak of her daughter .
5 Because now Cardiff was hauling them through the staircase door and back on to the first-floor landing .
6 Then he eased her back on to the chaise-longue and gave her a stern look .
7 If you use brilliant white flowers , such as larkspur or some of the daisies , you must ensure that there are several light tones in the picture , otherwise one 's eye will automatically focus on the white flowers and only then fall back on to the rest of the picture .
8 Pushing it back on to the desk without taking her eyes from it , she said , ‘ I do n't quite see .
9 She pushed all serious thoughts to the back of her mind and climbed back on to the helter-skelter of excitement and self-confidence induced by the undisguised admiration of Karl Gesner .
10 Suddenly it 's all there , complete with toilet paper , which you use and then deftly wind back on to the roll .
11 She slumped back on to the sofa , revealing quite a lot of bare thigh .
12 She slumped back on to the sofa , burying her face in her hands .
13 Owen caught her and eased her gently back on to the sofa .
14 Steve flopped back on to the sofa , his legs over the arm , cradling the glass of champagne in two hands .
15 Tallis tugged the body back on to the animal , then climbed into the saddle behind it .
16 Slowly ‘ crunch ’ your head and knees together and then lower your head back on to the floor .
17 Before doing so I should say by way of parenthesis that I have totally bypassed the colleagues who are currently members of the Government , several of whom suggested privately that they would resign if the Maastricht bill or anything like it is brought back on to the floor of the House of Commons .
18 Now he has had a chance to regroup and fall back on to the kind of terrain of which he is master — the written minute .
19 Then you can either put it back on to the soil it came from or , before doing this , keep it for a day or two in a small container lined with damp paper tissue .
20 Howard sinks back on to the day-bed .
21 She screwed the lid back on to the bottle and replaced it back in the cabinet .
22 But the ball cannoned into a tree , back on to the course and he salvaged his par to get into the play-off .
23 He stepped back on to the deck .
24 There was a thump as the lorry hit the bank , heeled over , and then bounced back on to the lane .
25 Harry looked into his glass as if he could see for miles and Charles nudged him back on to the subject .
26 I tried to get him back on to the subject .
27 A tip to speed up putting a knitted piece back on to the machine in gathers — as in the skirt for the doll , two stitches to each needle .
28 From there they went darting across the boiling surface like a dragon-fly , skimming with the currents where the banks were swept too open and smooth to hold flotsam , swinging aside round the sergeant 's paddle in the marked spots ; round the shovel-shaped end of Eel Island , which had scooped up a full load of branches , twigs , uprooted grass , and even more curious trophies , but not what they were seeking ; a little way down the sluggish backwater beyond , until motion ceased in stagnant shallows , and still there was nothing ; out into the flood again , hopping back on to the current as on to a moving belt that whisked them away ; revolving out of the race again where the trees leaned down into the water at the curve by the Lacey farm , acting like a great , living grille to filter out debris ; clean across the width of the river at the next coil , to where the long , sandy shallow ran out and encircled a miniature beach .
29 And with that she reversed the van , turned it round and drove back on to the road .
30 Several more aircraft were set ablaze , and as they drove back on to the road without a shot having been fired against them , Stirling and Mayne were cock-a-hoop .
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