just have been back to my old college

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shootingstar

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. . . MR.WEBB comes along Main Street, where he meets CONSTABLE WARREN. Their movements and voices are increasingly lively in the sharp air.
MR.WEBB:
Good morning, Bill.
CONSTABLE WARREN:
Good morning, Mr. Webb. You're up early.
MR.WEBB:
Yes, just been back to my old college in New York State. Been any trouble here?
CONSTABLE WARREN:
Well, I was called up this mornin' to rescue a Polish fella - darn near froze to death he was.
. . .
(Thornton Wilder, Our Town, Act III)

I don't really understand this sentence. What does back and to mean there? Does he say he is just coming back from his college or does he say he has paid
a visit to his college again? What is the meaning of just there?
 
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He recently returned from a visit to his old college. He was just there. It's "back" there because he had been to the college before (obviously, he went there, because it's his "old college").
 
"Just" there means in the very immediate past. Five minutes ago he had not got back but now he has.
 
I still don't understand it fully, I'm afraid.
1) Does he say "I have just been back from the journey/trip to my old college"? Is "from my journey/trip" implied in the original sentence "Yes, just been back (from my journey/trip) to my old college in New York State"?. In this case I would like to say "back from" - "Yes, just been back from my college in New York State" - like in the sentence "Dr. Smith is back from Spain". What defies me is the phrase "back to" there.

2) Or does he say "I have just paid a visit to my old college in New York State again"?
 
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Simplify the idea;
I have just been to my old college - I have just been to and come back from ... .
I have just been back to my old college - I have just returned to and come back from ... .
 
If you consider been to be the past participle of 'go', does that help you understand? You go to a place.

If the sentence were in the past simple instead of the present perfect, it would be:

Yes, I went back to my old college in New York State.
 
If you consider been to be the past participle of 'go', does that help you understand? You go to a place.

If the sentence were in the past simple instead of the present perfect, it would be:

Yes, I went back to my old college in New York State.
Yes, thank you, that helps. That's the way I can understand this sentence - in other words he says "I have (just) paid a visit to my old college in New York State", right?
 
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100% correct.
 
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