Examples of using Probably back in English and their translations into Indonesian
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Ecclesiastic
Probably back shortly.
I guess it was probably back in elementary school.
Probably back to Florida.
Miami? His other nut's probably back in Miami.
Probably back by now.
People also translate
To town on each other, probably back at your house.
Probably back into the dust.
Probably back in your room.
Fall down the stairs earlier. She's probably back at the hotel partying.
He's probably back by now.
But we will take it at six weeks, not probably back until September.”.
Probably back already.
Then he would go back to Xue Yue once and probably back to the Black Wind Mountain.
He's probably back there by now.
If you blow or brush it away,it will just land somewhere else, probably back on your project.
They're probably back in the lab.
None of these ships have been issuedorders in the last month which means they're probably back at their bases undergoing repairs.
Probably back at Hilltop right now.
By now he's probably back with his family… banging Mrs. Nick.
Probably back at my place, wishing she had a different daughter. It's a long story.
By now he's probably back with his family… banging Mrs. Nick.
He's probably back in the house skitching about.
By now he's probably back with his family… you know, banging Mrs. Nick.
He's probably back at the hotel right now, working his way to the bottom of a pint of Rocky Road.
A coalition of his barons probably backed by Eleanor, seized power in a coup d'état and expelled the Poitevins from England, reforming the royal government through a process called the Provisions of Oxford.
Sailing from Bristol, probably backed by the local Society of Merchant Venturers, Cabot crossed the Atlantic from a northerly latitude hoping the voyage to the"West Indies" would be shorter[52] and made a landfall somewhere in North America, possibly Newfoundland.
And all this while someone else trading binary options is probably back at home, or at that comfortable oversized chair at Starbucks which you never get to sit in because you're always in a rush for your job, and he or she is checking out USD or Euro prices, or the Dow Jones, or reading more news on Google about the latest Sony gadget or Apple release.
