Verb
(transitive) To stem from; to originate in.
The awqaf system in India goes back to the early days of the Islamic presence in the subcontinent.
(transitive, of two or more persons) To know each other since long from.
Bill and I go back to college.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see go back, to.
It was time to go back to the hotel.
A package that cannot be delivered will go back to the sender.
“About to go back to normal,” reads the main front page headline in tabloid Israel Hayom, reporting on a meeting that it assumed would have taken place and given its rubber stamp by the time its edition hit the once-again busy streets. Source: Internet
1 – Originally started 39th, but had to go back to the 43rd position due to changing to a backup car after crashing in the qualifying races. Source: Internet
According to him, the exercise carried out during the COVID-19 lockdown was a take-home ration, adding that after COVID-19, “we will go back to normal school feeding programmes.” Source: Internet
After terrible devastation, the siege is lifted, and people go back to something like their normal lives. Source: Internet
After that, it’s not so easy for them to simply go back to working again,” Antje Heise, SSICM deputy president, told SRF. Source: Internet
“After the hurricane … we pushed so hard to go back to this pseudo-normality,” Rodriguez told NPR. Source: Internet