Example sentences of "[adv] be [verb] back [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 A change in Eisenhower 's thinking on the USSR can perhaps be traced back to the visit by Churchill and Eden at the end of June 1954 .
2 Emphasis is put on the fact that learned skills such as shorthand are never forgotten and can soon be brought back to the standard required .
3 Twenty-three-year-old Jill Yate took the opportunity of telling her boss that , although she had had a wonderful year travelling around Europe , she was beginning to feel homesick and would soon be going back to the United States .
4 The ultimate origin of our seven-day week and the restrictions for long imposed on Sunday activities can thus be traced back to the Babylonians .
5 The lowering of interest rates last year provided extra spending power for the family but , as Mr Ingram , 34 , pointed out , that will probably now just be kept back for the rainy days to come in 1994 .
6 At Key Stage 2 , with older pupils , the enquiry can easily be pushed back to the Victorian Age , when pupils are now faced with the " problem " that all the people who lived at that time are now dead .
7 Delays before trial can therefore affect the result , for a defendant who is committed to hospital and recovers there would usually be released back into the community fairly swiftly .
8 The persistent failures can always be traced back to the original false premise that all existence is controlled by an undefined and unassailable ‘ god ’ .
9 ‘ Why do n't you tell me what to do ? ’ , and similar questions , should always be passed back to the counsellee .
10 When a task has been accomplished , a report on this fact must at once be fed back into the system .
11 Businesses that have sponsored for more than three years will also be brought back into the scheme .
12 there is increased liberality in interpretation in several texts , but they can mostly be traced back to the increasing imperial intervention in trust cases from the time of Marcus Aurelius .
13 If information could be transmitted from here to a Centauri in less time than this , it would effectively be travelling back into the past .
14 The problem in such cases can often be traced back to the actions of the owner .
15 The start of the London Underground-BR Crossrail scheme , scheduled originally for 1995 , could now be put back following the decision to involve the private sector.Likely to take five years to complete , the scheme would run from Reading and Aylesbury in the west across London to Shenfield in Essex in the east .
16 Gullibility and greed are charges that can just as well be flung back at the life companies .
17 The topsoil could then be pushed back across the site and to all appearances undisturbed agricultural land was left .
18 The results may then be cross-referenced back to the ACORN codes that are supplied with the sample , for aggregation and analysis .
19 Information can then be fed back from the cognitive system to the logogen system to influence the response of this system to the word which is going to be misread .
20 The updated file can then be copied back to the central system , by modem and telephone if necessary .
21 They , in turn , must then be distributed back into the system to ensure that the overall level of funding provided by the government is unchanged ( line – .
22 The plan of action will be written and taken to a full meeting of the governing body for its agreement or amendment ; it will then be taken back to the staff .
23 By its membership , the central committee was the coming together of regional committees to discuss common strategies , which would then be taken back to the regional committees for further discussion .
24 When Marx tells us in the Communist Manifesto that ‘ all history is the history of class struggles ’ , he is claiming that all conflict and change in societies can ultimately be traced back to the underlying class conflict , based on the opposing class interests arising from exploitation .
25 Any residues not digested in the stomach must therefore be ejected back through the oesophagus , and to prevent damage that might be caused by sharp ends of bones the process of pellet formation is such as to enclose the bones in the undigested skin and hair from the prey animals .
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