hark back造句1. It's useless to continually hark back to the past.
2. I have to hark back to this question that I mentioned earlier on in order to let you understand how serious it is.
3. The newest styles hark back to the clothes of the Seventies.
4. Some old people always hark back to how things were 30 years ago.
5. The newest styles hark back to the Seventies; wedge-soled styles which lace up the leg.
6. All four Gospels hark back to a period long before their own composition - perhaps as long as sixty or seventy years.
7. To hark back to what we were discussing earlier.
8. Suggesting inflation in a recession is not to hark back to the Phillips curve, which depicts an inverse relation between unemployment and inflation rates.
9. Critics of inequality hark back to older values, but people still appreciate what has been achieved.
10. The cars of today hark back to the first automobiles made about 1900.
11. The result devastated me at the time. Even now I hark back to it.
12. The pay is lower, about $625 a month, but lunch in the ministry canteen is free, and she gets benefits that hark back to socialist days, including a housing allowance.
13. Unlike Jews, Gypsies have had no known ancestral land to hark back to.