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

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1 Those responsible for implementing the change will be thwarted in their efforts if they can not have access to the resources they need .
2 You do not have access to the module specified .
3 At this stage , as Ernst & Young does not have access to the shareholders ' list , it is unaware of the numbers involved , but it estimates that compensation payments may total £1.4m .
4 ‘ You do not have access to the books ? ’
5 She is portrayed as a victim of a patriarchal and backward culture , trapped in a position of victimage because she does not have access to the resistances offered by Western culture .
6 Modules , in this sense , do not have access to the contents of other modules and , in Carl Hewitt of MIT 's immortal words , ‘ modules should n't be able to dicker around with the insides of their neighbours ’ .
7 You do not have access to the package specified .
8 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 .
9 Er , I mean that 's , that 's not just here it 's everywhere , but one of the things that is very clear is that people often do not have access to the sort of information that they need about hazards .
10 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 !
11 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 .
12 ‘ 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 . ’
13 The husband 's advisers will also have regard to the advantages of severance whilst matrimonial proceedings are pending .
14 He must also have regard to the matters set out in paragraphs ( a ) to ( f ) of the checklist in s1(3) ( see Chapter 9 , 6(b) ) as if it were addressed to him and not to the court .
15 The Panel would also have recourse to the courts .
16 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 .
17 This is because the denizens of the past did n't have access to the theory of cognitive metaphor , and that way of understanding language .
18 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 ) .
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