Is there an error in this sentence?
When Darun heard the news that his father had been hospitalised he cancelled his trip and returned back to his village.
I think the error is 'back' but I need your confirmation.
Is there an error in this sentence?
When Darun heard the news that his father had been hospitalised he cancelled his trip and returned back to his village.
I think the error is 'back' but I need your confirmation.
There is nothing ungrammatical about "returned back to his village" even though "back" is slightly redundant. You could say:
When Darun heard the news that his father had been hospitalised he cancelled his trip and returned to his village.
The word back is implied by the word return, so basically it is not necessary to use back. Just return is enough.
The mistake is the redundency of using 'returned back'. It is not acceptable, unless a character speaks like that (dialogue, or 1st person narrative). Also, there is a comma missing that indicates time.
When Darun heard the news that his father had been hospitalised, he cancelled his trip and returned to his village.
'Returned' is not a proper word as of the correct English usage, but is a misconception usually considered a word due to to repetition. As of 2012, the Oxford dictionary considered it as a word, but its usage is still considered wrong in context of the corseated British English.