Example sentences of "[noun] [modal v] have [noun sg] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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1 ( 3 ) In considering the grounds for refusal mentioned in paragraph ( a ) of subsection ( 1 ) above , the licensing board may have regard to any misconduct on the part of any person mentioned in that paragraph , whether or not constituting a breach of this Act or any byelaw made thereunder , which in the opinion of the board has a bearing on his fitness to hold a licence .
2 User must have access to all modules to be read prior to calling READ_COMPLETE_ROOT_PACKAGE .
3 the new user must have access to all the modules referenced on the DC .
4 A given physics department may have money from all three of these , as well as the general physics pool .
5 In any forthcoming election for a constituent assembly , all parties should have access to all parts of South Africa , including the ten ‘ homelands ’ , without intimidation .
6 no-one in their right mind would have bet on that being the winner .
7 If the skills are not immediately applicable then neither students or pupils nor faculty staff or teachers will respond , even though the skills might have pertinence at all levels .
8 Only a member of the Santerre household would have access to such a ladder .
9 Middle management will have power over those lower down the organisation if middle management determines pay , promotion and bonuses .
10 Secondly , and more specifically , where a person has commenced proceedings in the High Court but those proceedings should , in the opinion of the court , have been commenced in a county court in accordance with any provision made under s 1 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 or by or under any other enactment , the person responsible for determining the amount which is to be awarded to that person by way of costs must have regard to those circumstances ( s 51(8) ) .
11 Only the head should have access to any adverse report .
12 ( 2 ) Subject to subsection ( 3 ) below , the court shall have power in any such proceedings to exempt any person from liability to make contribution , or to direct that the contribution to be recovered from any person shall amount to a complete indemnity . ’
13 When exercising its discretion the court will have regard to all the circumstances .
14 This Congress demands that deaf people should have access to all official information to the same extent as hearing people .
15 When the Government introduce complicated legislation , it is only right that people should have access to those with basic information about it .
16 It was in response to this that the Scott Committee on Land Utilization in Rural Areas urged that agricultural use should have priority in any conflicts over rural land use .
17 For example , when a Mozambican and expatriate doctor are working in the same hospital , the expatriate may have access to more drugs .
18 Mr Bruce said that the Social Work Director Paul Lee had been asked if the families ' lawyers could have access to all the interviews and medical examinations of the children that were performed for the Social Work Department .
19 More and more , hon. Members will have responsibility for these matters without the direct authority to do anything about them .
20 Much as I like to believe a man can have sex with any woman and enjoy it , it just does n't stand the test . ’
21 For this purpose , a LIFESPAN user may grant a special access link between any other user and himself , which means that the specified user will have access to all the modules managed by the original user .
22 If the link has been granted , the specified user will have access to all your modules .
23 The argument here is not that all children should have access to all aspects of the curriculum .
24 By 1995 , historians will have access to all of the Macmillan and Douglas-Home years as well as the opening of the Wilson era .
25 One or two of them might be related to me , but I work on the assumption that my children will have access to most things and personal experience of some .
26 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 .
27 Under this Treaty , if a service is legally available in one or more EEC countries , then all EEC citizens should have access to this service , and therefore to all relevant information .
28 However , this can never be a free and equal contract , because the individual worker must have work at any price simply in order to survive , while the capitalist ( though needing workers ) can employ or sack any individual he chooses .
29 Few in a packed , drenched stadium would have bet on either outcome in a first half where England 's attacking approach was skidding and slipping off course while the bigger Boks dug in , drove hard and let the awesome boot of Botha do the rest .
30 As published in the central press , it specified that defence , foreign policy , energy , communications , transport and budgetary matters would be decided ‘ jointly ’ by the centre and the republics , but that in all other matters republican laws would have precedence over those of the union as a whole .
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