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      • They're not quite synonymous, although in this context some of them are interchangeable. Get back refers to the arrival. If you got back home at 3AM, it means you entered your home at 3AM, even if you've left earlier. Go back refers to the departure.
      ell.stackexchange.com/questions/156527/get-back-vs-go-back-vs-come-back-vs-arrive-vs-return
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  2. 1) get back:to return to a place. 2) go back:to return to a place that you have just come from. 3) come back:to return to a particular place or person. 4) arrive:to get to the place you are going to. 5) return:to go or come back to a place where you were before.

  3. Arrive is usually followed by preposition "at", whereas come is followed by preposition "to". We should not use "arrive to". Prepositions that follow arrive are at, in, and on. In informal way, if you say that someone has arrived, you mean that they have become successful or famous.

  4. May 7, 2020 · If you go somewhere and then go back to where you set off from, you "come back". You go to work in the morning and come back home in the evening. When you arrive at the place you set off from, you "get back" to that place.

  5. May 19, 2013 · They are close. However, "arrive at" specifically points to the moment a person reaches the destination, while "come to" can cover a wider period of time. E.g: He came to my office last Tuesday. He arrived at 9.53 precisely.

  6. Mar 24, 2022 · COME and GO work differently semantically than GET/ARRIVE/REACH, and I am not taking the prepositions into account here. Those two terms involve issues of directionality and speaker location that get, arrive and reach do not.

  7. The speakers use come back and go back (and even be back) depending on where they are at the time of speaking. They are both at home, so they use go back to talk about returning to the store, and come back to talk about returning home.

  8. Is there a difference between 'arrive at' and 'arrive to'? While the former is more common, the latter is seeing increased usage. Want a really nerdy and technical explanation? You're going to have to read on.

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