Example sentences of "this [noun sg] [vb -s] back [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 If all the transactions costs are zero , this condition collapses back to the previous no-arbitrage equality .
2 This law dates back to the Middle Ages , when it was a means of filling the royal coffers , and until now it has allowed the State ( today the Treasury ) to claim possession of valuable objects whose owners can not be traced .
3 This process links back to the idea of positively tracking the child 's behaviour .
4 Much of this rain runs back into the sea , combining with the rainwater from the great rivers of China .
5 This point relates back to the issue of cross-species extrapolation raised in the preceding chapter .
6 This suggests that ri2 originated from the transposition of ri1 , but that this event dates back to a time before P.wickerhamii and S.obliquus diverged .
7 Modular or unit credit courses are currently the subject of much discussion in higher education , but interest in them in this country dates back to the 1970s ( much earlier in the USA ) when , for example , the Nuffield team produced a report on them rather facetiously called The Container Revolution ( Mansell 1976 ) .
8 It is interesting also that this scheme goes back to the roots of the Elim movement .
9 This tradition goes back to the earliest days of the Ottoman state , to Molla Edebali ( d. 726/1326 ) , Osman 's father-in-law , and is based on statements in both the and the .
10 However , if liquids are exposed to the open atmosphere at room temperature , this energy flows back into the liquid from the surroundings .
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