hark back
Học thuậtThân thiện
The speaker's comment seems to hark back to an earlier point in the conversation.
Definition
- Verb:
- To recall or refer back to something from the past: To mention or be reminiscent of an earlier event, idea, or style.
Usage
The verb "hark back" is used to indicate that something is reminiscent of or intentionally references something older. It often describes how a current idea, style, or statement evokes an earlier one. It is typically followed by the preposition "to."
Examples
- Verb:
- The design of the new car harks back to the classic models of the 1960s.
- His latest speech harked back to the themes of his first campaign.
- This tradition harks back to a time when the community was much smaller.
Advanced Usage
- "to hark back to": This is the standard phrasal verb construction. It is not commonly used without "to."
- The filmmaker's style harks back to the silent movie era.
Variants and Related Words
- Hark (verb, archaic): To listen or pay close attention. (Note: "Hark back" is a fixed phrasal verb derived from this older usage, but "hark" alone is rarely used in modern English outside of specific phrases like "Hark! The herald angels sing.")
Synonyms
- Recall
- Evoke
- Refer back to
- Harken back (a common variant)
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Harken back: A variant with the same meaning as "hark back."
- The novel's setting harkens back to medieval times.
Related Idioms
- While "hark back" itself functions like an idiom, there are no common separate idioms using it. Its meaning is fixed as described.
The speaker's comment seems to hark back to an earlier point in the conversation.
Verb
- go back to something earlier
- This harks back to a previous remark of his