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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So he cries and he goes back to the beach .
2 The Library Association is deeply concerned that the imposition of these bans constitutes a major breach of the traditional principle that public libraries should be a neutral and non-partisan service , a principle which goes back to the beginning of the public libraries in the middle of the nineteenth century .
3 This however is unlikely , and that the idea of decorating a metope with a figured scene goes back to the beginning of the Doric order is shown by the painted terracotta examples of the seventh century ( above , p. 13 ) .
4 His hands are tight across my back , then he lets go and as I walk out of the room his face goes back to the letters .
5 If the poem goes back to the origins of religion , it also goes back to the origins of society and language .
6 If the poem goes back to the origins of religion , it also goes back to the origins of society and language .
7 The answer goes back to the origins of the Hungarian nation and tells us something about its individuality .
8 If the right hon. Gentleman goes back to the incidents to which he was referring , he will find that they were not ones that could naturally and immediately be followed by a statement .
9 The base goes back to the RAFin SEptember 94. it 's not yet known what will be done with the land but many local people hope it 'll be used the upper H
10 God 's claim to the firstborn goes back to the night of the Passover ( Exodus 12 ) .
11 The origin of the equivalence principle goes back to the experiments of Galileo .
12 Brighton & Hove has a tradition of fine hotel-keeping and hospitality that goes back to the Prince Regent 's days .
13 If there are no more loans to be entered , the user presses the RETURN key and goes back to the options list .
14 ‘ She always goes back to the attraction , but if I keep saying ‘ no ’ she will eventually learn not to do it . ’
15 He 's a bit of a genealogist — claims the family goes back to the Normans .
16 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
17 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
18 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
19 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
20 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
21 In all cases the result of the project goes back to the user at stage 1 .
22 In all cases the result of the project goes back to the user at stage 1 .
23 A list of past rectors of the parish goes back to the year 1274 .
24 He charts an unfolding if uncertain logic which goes back to the way in which the welfare state was put together after the war , as pieces were tacked on in a rather haphazard way to existing state institutions .
25 Much of the Bible 's teaching goes back to the way we are made ; it goes back to creation itself .
26 It goes back to the question I posed above : what motivates people to study sex differences and to place such emphasis upon them ?
27 If one goes back to the Greek , one will find the term speiran , a precise translation of ‘ cohort ’ .
28 Of course , the concept of a liberal education goes back to the Greeks , and Newman 's lectures and books were only one more interpretation of an idea which as Rothblatt ( 1976 ) clearly shows has demonstrated a remarkable adaptability and longevity .
29 In thesimpler organisms , the feedback signal goes back to the boundaries on which the stimuli impinge .
30 ‘ If it simply goes back to the parliament 's corridors , lots of hard work will be wasted . ’
  Next page