Are you back from london?

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Senior Member. I am back in London means you are in London and you’re telling someone (maybe even yourself). I am back to London is an expression I would use only in this sort of circumstance: Him: You’ve been travelling a lot lately.

Moreover, are you back home meaning? : in one’s hometown : in the place one is from People back home would never believe how much he has changed.

People ask also, are you in London or are you at London? ‘are you in London’ is correct. ‘are you at London‘ is incorrect. With the names of cities, countries, towns, continents etc (which represents a large area) we use ‘in’. We use ‘at’ with the names of localities, colonies etc (which represents a small area).

You asked, have you come back or came back? ‘come back’. the sentence is correct the way it is. if you wanted to use ‘came’, then you could rephrase it to say “A few hours had passed and they hoped Yukino would have ‘came back‘ to them”.

Considering this, is it back in or back to? Back to will also be correct, but in a different construction: I will go/come back to Hong Kong next Monday. Here, you have a verb of movement (go/come), in which case you use the preposition to; if it’s a form of the verb to be, then you use the preposition in.

Is it back at or back in?

For instance we would say “I’m so happy to be back in my village”, “I’m so happy to be back in the house where i was born”. Home is more personal than House and so gets “at”. Other variants “I’m so happy to be back on the street where i was born”.

Are you back is it correct sentence?

You could say: 1) “Are you back?”, or 2) “Have you come back?” but the second sentence is awkward. ‘Are’ in the present tense and ‘came’ in the past tense doesn’t make any sense. No. This is not a grammatically correct sentence.

How do you say back home?

Yes it is. It should be “back home” unless the word “home” is preceded by a possessive pronoun or a noun with an apostrophe. Then the preposition ‘to’ should be used.

When I get back meaning?

1 : to come or go again to a person, place, or condition : return, revert getting back to the main topic of the lecture. 2 : to gain revenge : retaliate —usually used with at. transitive verb. : to regain possession of : recover.

Is London correct?

Both in London and at London can be correct, it all depends on the context and the relationship between the speaker and London.

Can we use at before city name?

“In” for Location. Deciding which word you should be using comes down to a question of where. “At” is used when you are at the top, bottom or end of something; at a specific address; at a general location; and at a point. “In” is used in a space, small vehicle, water, neighborhood, city and country.

Is returning back correct?

‘Return back’ is usage of redundant phrase. In case you want to use: ‘return it back’, the ‘it’ is missing. There is nothing ungrammatical about using “return back” , but “back” becomes redundant when used with “return”.

Is come back one word?

a return to a former higher rank, popularity, position, prosperity, etc.: The ex-champion kept trying to make a comeback. a clever or effective retort; rejoinder; riposte: That was a great comeback the comedian made to the hecklers.

What came back?

verb. past tense of come back.

How do you say back-to-back?

  1. consecutive,
  2. sequent,
  3. sequential,
  4. straight,
  5. succeeding,
  6. successional,
  7. successive.

What does back of mean?

“The back of…” clearly means some time AFTER the time stated. … As the hands go round, they move from approaching the hour indicators to departing from them… they become ‘behind,’ or in a fairly simple figure of speech, at the ‘back’ of the time in question.

Will be back in or to?

“To” requires movement. Always use “I will be back in the country” using the definite article “the”. You can say “I will be back in America” or “I will come back to the country.”

How do you use the back?

“At the back” is used to refer to the position of something within something else. “The screw driver is on the table at the back of the garage.” “On the back” is used to describe something being on top of, attached to or otherwise touching a part of something which is it’s back.

Do we use in the back?

Thinking about it, you use at the back if you mean outside an object and in the back if you mean inside an object.

Is it correct to say in back of?

Although some object to their use, the phrases in back of and the shorter—and much older— back of with the meaning “behind” are fully established as standard in American English: The car was parked(in) back of the house.

Are you back home is correct?

Both are correct. “Are you home?” implies the fuller question “Are you at home?” although it could also suggest the person may have been elsewhere, especially the first option, implying “Have you arrived home?” or “Are you back (at) home?” In my experience, these are used interchangeably.

Are you back to work meaning?

to get back to work: to return to work, to recommence working, to carry on working, to begin working again.

Will be back sentences?

‘I will be back soon, God willing. I will be back 5/16/12, God willing! I will be back for PMQs. I will be back in an hour”.

What is back to pavilion?

You have just been knocked out and you have to go back to the cottage and watch the rest of the game. You are no longer a player or your entry has expired. Guys, going back to the pavilion means going back to the place you left off.

How do you use back home in a sentence?

I carried on to the client’s home and then hot footed it back home to get David. She said afterwards that they had made her feel uneasy and that she had turned to go back home to avoid them. Once she had gunned the engine of her corvette, she zoomed back home to Pinnacle Point.

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