Example sentences of "[noun] go back " in BNC.

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1 It is a massive con trick — Or will Labour go back to very large Government borrowing , on the scale that occurred in one year under the last Labour Government , of 9.5 per cent .
2 Her shoulders go back , her neck straightens , the small of her back arches , she presents her best profile , as her own hormonal changes , mirroring your earlier ones , start detonating gently inside her body .
3 Well we know , from talking to some of the school teachers involved , they go back and the kids go back and talk to the other kids in the form .
4 We have a special position in that the oldest regiment in the British Army is the Honourable Artillery Company , which traces its history back to 1537 , whereas the oldest regular units go back only to the middle of the 17th century .
5 Lean forward more , and put your lower leg back , let your knees bend and your feet go back , heels down . ’
6 Although historic links between the two countries go back long before the days when the French were sending troops to help the Jacobite rebellions , the French presence in Scotland remains relatively small .
7 All parents , he told them , have the right to say , ‘ I want my child to leave ’ , and he said , ‘ Our job is to help the child go back . ’
8 When engineers go back to the drawing board and create a new design , they do not necessarily throw away the ideas from the old design .
9 They made the girl go back to Baskerville Hall with them , and locked her in a room upstairs .
10 Sharks of essentially modern type go back to the Jurassic .
11 The origins of this philosophy go back as far as 1970 when Shell and the Nature Conservancy first devised a competition aimed at encouraging young people to come up with ideas to conserve their local environment .
12 Slazenger and sport go back a long way but did you know that they also have a great sports toiletries range ?
13 Although they have worked as a duo since 1987 and have built up a great following throughout these islands and abroad , their respective musical experiences go back much further .
14 The discussions between the County Council and the District Council go back some considerable time , over the proposed level of provision in the district statement erm the core strategy for employment , and there is a particular issue between us over the distribution of this land within the district , in terms of its compatibility with the structure plan strategy .
15 From what I 've heard , you and Lissa go back some years , too .
16 But because , as one inveterate rebel , whose battle honours go back far into Mrs Thatcher 's reign , delightedly claimed after the election , there is a new mood abroad .
17 Its origins go back to 1970 when a specially commissioned task force of the National Heart and Lung Institute ( as it then was ) , was asked to look into the feasibility of a trial which would settle , once and for all , the question of whether dietary change could , on its own , reduce the frequency of heart attacks in the American population .
18 The school , whose origins go back to the twelfth century , has been moved to a new location .
19 Its origins go back to the rediscovery of perspective in the Renaissance , and then to the architect 's drawings of the eighteenth century .
20 Its origins go back to 1939 when , due to the clouds of War , a decision was taken to remove the majority of Army Ordnance stores from Woolwich Arsenal and Dockyard to a new Army Depot to be built at Donnington in Shropshire .
21 But even in this tranquil part of England many of the ‘ open ’ villages had a variety of local crafts , distributive trades and small industries , whose origins go back well into the eighteenth century .
22 FR go back in time
23 Despite the fact that spiders are all over the place in Dostoevsky , not just in Svidrigailov 's dirty bathhouse vision of Eternity , and that urban potted plants go back to the beginning in Poor People , we are here firmly inside Crime and Punishment in its abandoned first-person narrative form ( ‘ I am on trial and will tell all ’ ) : Petersburg evenings and their hanging summer light , noises from below , happy workmen , blessed ‘ living life ’ elsewhere , a lonely man in pain passing through gates , over thresholds , slipping up and down staircases , the buzzing By of Raskolnikov 's dream and his awakening , intense time-consciousness alternating with time-oblivion .
24 Some aspects of open enrolment go back to the 1980 Education Act .
25 Buildings on the site go back to the eleventh-century , when the town hall , the Broletto Vecchio , of the free city of Milan stood here .
26 Plans to build a display hangar on the NAM site go back to the early 1980s .
27 The origins of Sudan 's severe debt crisis go back to the policies pursued from the early 1970s onwards .
28 In fact , the origins of the Geneva conference go back to the international chemistry conference held in Paris in 1889 .
29 That was not , of course , achieved in six or seven months : the beginnings of the process go back several years , when our ‘ old ’ domestic Ethics Committee set up , in conjunction with the other Institutes , a joint Working Party on Independence and the Audit .
30 I think what what Mr Wincup was saying at the end of the day , is that the Inspector 's report and the conclusions on the greenbelt local plan will go back to the parent authority , the originating authority , which is North Yorkshire , equally my rec report , out recommendations on this alteration go back to North Yorkshire , they have to take regard to whatever we recommend , ultimately they will take a decision on that , erm depending on the decision other things may flow from it , and I ca n't really speculate on what those are at the moment , but effectively the final decision as to what they accept or reject will rest with North Yorkshire .
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