Example sentences of "take us back to [art] " in BNC.

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1 The attempt to answer this question leads us into a hitherto little-explored region of English grammar since it poses the problem of the relation between the infinitive and the category of person , and takes us back to a use not yet analysed satisfactorily , the so-called " infinitive of reaction " .
2 That mention of the desert takes us back to the territory traversed in The Waste Land , ‘ The Hollow Men ’ , and Ash-Wednesday .
3 There is something free , reckless , vaguely counter-cultural about it ; it ignores the voice of prudence and takes us back to the days of our youth when we defied authority by taking it up .
4 This change takes us back to the UK position some five or so years ago .
5 If we are looking for advice on a particular situation which affects us then impartiality of the second type is particularly important ; for instance , the judge who assesses the relevant facts and selects the relevant moral or legal rules must not be someone who has something to gain or lose by the outcome , although this presupposes the correctness of the rules to be applied and so takes us back to the impartiality normally associated with legislators , which is a matter of their involvement in determining rules which are not only universalisable but are actually to be universalised , at least within a given community , and to their impartiality in the third sense namely the adequacy of the consideration given to the various relevant considerations .
6 He likes to recall China 's ‘ 5,000 year-old tradition of history ’ ( which takes us back to the mythical Yellow Emperor ) and urges China 's battered intellectuals to revive their patriotic spirit .
7 As Kee says : ‘ The religion of Constantine takes us back to the context of the Old Testament .
8 Controversy on this issue takes us back to the beginnings of literary theory : to Aristotle and Plato .
9 The second question raised by the dual nature of disciplines — as bodies of knowledge and bodies of people — takes us back to the very distinction between ‘ academic ’ and ‘ professional ’ courses .
10 The answer to this question takes us back to the very origins of the town in the middle years of the twelfth century .
11 No one could see Old Town Street , at Plymouth , without beginning at once to speculate about the significance of a name like this : and in fact the name takes us back to the very beginnings , to the poverty-stricken little Saxon village of farmers and fishermen , well down behind the Hoe , out of which this great naval city has grown .
12 It takes us back to the past , when belief in God was a living thing . ’
13 My tale for today takes us back to the origins of the resistance of Marseilles to the seductions of the Celtic mainland .
14 And that takes us back to the issue of continuity/discontinuity between animality and humanity .
15 At this point the whole argument not only takes us back to the eighteenth-century speculations about poetry versus reason , but begins to tie in with recent neurological discoveries concerning the workings of the two halves of the human brain which have been derived from experimentally induced conditions of aphasia .
16 How often a sudden aroma can take us back to an earlier time in our lives and cause us to feel happy or sad depending on the memories aroused .
17 A ‘ cross theology ’ , not on its own , let me add , but central to our preaching , will take us back to the central verity of our faith .
18 Many people will be concerned at my suggestion that drawing should be taught in our schools , perhaps fearing that it will take us back to the kind of dull lesson I have described , with children being taught unimaginative and stereotyped ways of drawing .
19 That really did take us back to the good old days .
20 Er we at the County Council think that to delete that Greater York erm dimension would take us back to the realms of uncertainty , past uncertainty , in the Greater York area , we 're therefore proceeding with a Greater York dimension in policy H One at none thousand seven hundred dwellings , which equates to hundred percent migration .
21 Du n no , I might ask my dad cos he 'll probably take us back to the pub
22 Even sad films took us back to a world that we understood , a world where people lived their lives , hoping for happiness and sometimes even finding it .
23 They let us see him for a couple of minutes , and then they took us back to the prison .
24 In effect , in one step the concept of the turbidity current took us back to the catastrophism of earlier geological thought .
25 She took us back to the house where a servant showed us up to our rooms .
26 We got a lot of plaudits for that victory because it took us back to the top of the league . ’
27 The word ‘ humanity ’ borrowed some of its force from the 1959 approach , but the rest of the definition would have taken us back to a test of manners based on an assumption of consensus which is at worst suspect and at best unproven , but which is to be measured only by outrage , surely an irrational and wholly subjective response .
28 The italicised words take us back to the ‘ Polo Syndrome ’ , and remind us that the fundamental difficulty of all curriculum planning — how to get a quart into a pint pot — still remains to be addressed .
29 Our collections of still photographs take us back to the Crimean War , but for this century we have millions of feet of movie record , much of it unexplored .
30 I remember coming off stage in Rio and being piled into a helicopter to take us back to the hotel .
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