Example sentences of "have [noun] to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Sometimes the people engaged in them will have attitudes to , and feelings about , old people which are not acceptable and may even be ageist .
2 The Panel would also have recourse to the courts .
3 ‘ He further informed the prince that , should he find evidence of a continuing liaison between himself and yourself , he would consider it his duty to at once have recourse to the king his father . ’
4 Residents of the City of Westminster , while falling into the catchment areas of three different health districts , did not have recourse to admissions to any long-stay hospitals after the closure of Banstead in 1986 .
5 The cost of the court proceeding and any compensation will be borne by the requesting state , which , depending on national legislation , may have recourse to the person responsible for the illegal export .
6 Positive feedback systems such as the one outlined , can serve as very useful explanatory devices in social science , and we shall have recourse to another such system later .
7 This approach is convenient , and we shall often have recourse to it ; however , it has disadvantages ( even supposing that a fully adequate account can be given of such notions as ‘ the class of dogs ’ ) .
8 Caterers , hoteliers , innkeepers and restaurateurs may have recourse to any one of a number of courts for a multiplicity of reasons ; the following are those which they are most likely to use .
9 Should those measures be insufficient , the member state might have recourse to other criteria which prove appropriate , because , in that respect , the aims of the Common Fisheries Policy could take precedence over the rules on free movement laid down in the E.E.C .
10 In summary , I agree that the courts should have recourse to Hansard in the circumstances and to the extent he proposes .
11 Because one can not have recourse to one simple authoritative document to discover the provisions of the Constitution , one has instead to research four separate sources : statute law , common law , conventions , and works of authority .
12 In seeking to interpret the Constitution , the courts may have recourse to works by constitutional experts .
13 Given the disparate sources of the Constitution and the fact that important relationships within and between organs of the state are not laid down in any one formal or binding document , it is not surprising that one must have recourse to books by constitutional scholars to discover the extent and nature of those relationships .
14 They should have opportunities to : — use a range of approaches for investigating the past , including outline , in-depth , thematic and comparative .
15 One who does not have ties to the old regime is ninth on the list : Janusz Lekszton , a 29-year-old Gdynia-based entrepreneur whose firm , EL-GAZ , produces gas stoves , pipes and other building materials .
16 This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act .
17 So , for instance , the interpretations can have relevance to a place of work .
18 Perhaps much of what Sickert taught does not have relevance to all of us today ; perhaps many of his doctrines are outworn , his opinions unsystematic , but looking at the smouldering vigour of the painting , and the sinewy strength of the drawing in the works now on view at the Royal Academy , it is difficult not to feel that here is the work of a real artist , of a man who knew what he was doing — and why .
19 However , techniques that are developed for theoretical purposes or for other applications may have relevance to the present project , and this is indicated where appropriate .
20 In addition many of the initiatives relating to adults will have relevance to this age group .
21 The Code may also have relevance to unitisation proposals which are in competition with an offer to which the Code applies .
22 And if you move to a new house , remember that other people may still have keys to the premises — fit new locks , and use them !
23 Like when there considering how there gon na spend there money every year , they should have reference to this policy cos general Council policy like , how can I spend my money to redistribute resor resources , so that we can provide more for people who are in need , so it is n't just about projects , it 's about a policy and we develop those kind of things , we 've already talked about the Unit Policy and we developed that .
24 A covenant may very well have reference to the land , but , unless it is reasonably incidental to the relation of landlord and tenant , it can not be said to touch and concern the land so as to be capable of running therewith or with the reversion .
25 I remember when I was a child that occasionally my parents would have visitors to the house , people that I 'd never set
26 Perhaps only three or four keys on the typewriter keyboard that the computer will have need to be pressed at all , and if a child presses the wrong one it does n't all stop and funny , you know , impersonal messages come up on the screen saying he 's done something wrong , it just ignores them and waits for one of the correct responses .
27 These are effectively IOUs certifying that there is a sum of money on deposit for a stated period and at the end of the period the holder of the CD will have title to the principal and interest .
28 A finder does have title to the goods ( a ‘ possessory ’ title ) but it is subject to the title of the original owner .
29 They were advised in 1743 : You can not expect to marry in such a manner as neither of you shall have occasion to work , and none but a fool will take a wife whose bread must be earned solely by his labour and who will contribute nothing towards it herself .
30 Ancient laws governed who would have rights to watering holes , but the young herders were often caught in the breach , stealing camels and sometimes women , from neighbouring clans .
  Next page