trace back



trace back

v.
1. To ascertain the successive stages in the development or progress of something by reasoning backward from an effect to a cause: We traced our family history back 200 years. Skepticism as a philosophical movement can be traced back to Sextus Empiricus.
2. To derive from something or someone: The counterfeit drugs traced back to an American expatriate. Many English words trace back to Greek or Latin.
See also: back, trace

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Yama-Hinduism
Halldor-Norwegian
PÒLPOLScottish
Erastusi-RAS-təs (English)Biblical, Biblical Latin
HeraHER-ə (English)Greek Mythology
Guanting-Chinese