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JOSEPH
date from, date back to, trace back to Can I say that 'date from' and 'date back to' are always positive? For example: The cathedral dates from/back to the 18th century. But when it comes to 'trace back to', it has to be passive, for example: The cathedral can be traced back to the 18the century. Am I correct? Thanks!Thanks Alancoots! 'Positive'...I guess I should've said 'active voice'. : p
Dec 14, 2010 4:22 PM
Answers · 1
1
I'm not sure what you mean by "positive". I think you mean that something is certain or uncertain? Either way, you can use both "traces" and "dates". When you add "can be" to the sentence, it sounds less certain. "The cathedral can be dated back to the 18th century." - Less certain. "The cathedral dates back to the 18th century." - More certain. "The cathedral can be traced back to the 18th century." - Less certain. "The cathedral traces back to the 18th century." - More certain. All of these are stated as fact. If you are simply unsure of something, you would use additional qualifiers. "The cathedral probably dates back to the 18th century." This is stated as something with is most likely true, but might not be.
December 14, 2010
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