Example sentences of "[noun] [vb mod] [adv] have [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 Candidates shall not have access to examination scripts .
2 However , if it is thought that the joint tenancy might be severed ( and there might be good matrimonial or tax planning reasons for this ) it is preferable to include the enlargement of powers as in Precedent 34 for otherwise the trustees of the conveyance may not have power to mortgage or charge the property ( see Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 1964 , s8 ) .
3 But rugby will never have access to the three major broadcast television networks in the U.S. as a stand-alone sport ; there are too many established sports hogging the airwaves .
4 Individuals may not have access to private transport to substitute for inadequate public provision ; they may not be able to obtain a lift when necessary and they may not possess a telephone or the resources to obtain a car or phone .
5 From the list given in the book , he chooses only herbs which grow in wet places that the fish would naturally have access to .
6 Williams would certainly have access to candles , ’ he continued .
7 That person should nevertheless have regard to its potential liability under the general law for negligent misstatement ( see Chapter 20 ) .
8 The court can therefore have regard to the totality of the delay between the date of accrual of the cause of action and the date of issue of the writ , notwithstanding s33(3) ( b ) and ( c ) and is likely to pay particular heed to the length of any delay in first notifying the defendant of the claim against him , even if such delay occurred before the expiry of the limitation period , ( Donovan v Gwentoys Ltd [ 1990 ] 1 WLR 472 ) .
9 The Code may also have relevance to unitisation proposals which are in competition with an offer to which the Code applies .
10 All the best books on cat care insist that cats should always have access to fresh , clean water and that the water should be changed regularly .
11 And again there is a suggestion put forward to support this theory that local people wo n't have access to housing , and the suggestion is that ou that migrants have the ability to outbid locals .
12 I have also accepted the advice of a number of organisations , including the TUC , that , for security reasons , union members should not have access to the names and addresses of other union members .
13 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 .
14 The husband 's advisers will also have regard to the advantages of severance whilst matrimonial proceedings are pending .
15 ADULTS and school leavers in remote parts of Argyll and Bute will soon have access to further education colleges without having to travel .
16 The pupils would then have access to an OPAC ( On-line public access catalogue ) similar to those available in some polytechnics and universities at present .
17 The bureau will not have access to clinical , medical or nursing notes about the patient .
18 First , women may not have access to relatives who are able or willing to respond .
19 She reiterated the Governments view ’ first expressed by us in 1985 that the majority of full-time students should not have access to benefits as a means of supporting themselves whilst studying . ’
20 The Panel would also have recourse to the courts .
21 A recent assessment estimated that the IRA may still have access to up to eight tons .
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