Example sentences of "[pron] has a right " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Everyone has a right to first-rate care and everyone has the right to complain if they 're not satisfied .
2 Everyone has a right to be buried in the churchyard of the parish in which they die — assuming that one exists , and that there is space left .
3 Article 25 ( 1 ) of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights , subscribed by the United Kingdom in December 1948 , runs as follows : ‘ Everyone has a right to a standard of living adequate for the health and wellbeing of himself and of his family , including medical care. ,
4 The statement ‘ everyone has a right to medical care adequate to his health and well-being ’ is , in the Universal Declaration , tantamount to the highwayman 's ‘ stand and deliver ’ : if this right is not realisable within a society , it must be realised by compulsory redistribution and reorganisation as between societies , and if it is still impracticable even by compulsion on an international scale , so much the worse for the international community !
5 Everyone has a right to first-rate care and everyone has the right to complain if they 're not satisfied .
6 Everyone has a right to live as they want , as long as it does n't harm others ’ , she says .
7 Everyone has a right to expect her to be predictable ( however trying things are ) and she ought to be worried and apologetic if she behaves strangely .
8 Since everyone has a right to treatment whether they have been contributors or not , it is difficult to justify .
9 Everyone has a right to be treated with respect .
10 Everyone has a right to everything .
11 We argue about whether everyone has a right that the state protect him from assaults by other citizens , or provide him a decent level of medical care , or guarantee his security from attack by foreign powers .
12 Everyone has a right to his or her opinion and mum has received her fair share of opposition .
13 The one who has a right to dispose of it is the one who has created it .
14 This is clearly undesirable for the nurse , the staff , and most of all the patient , who has a right to expect expert care and attention .
15 This bilateralism ‘ contributes to an ‘ orderly ’ outward appearance of the law because it facilitates a precise identification of who has a right or a claim against whom and who may enforce it' .
16 The doctor in charge , the hospital managers or the nearest relative may discharge the patient , who has a right to apply to the Mental Health Review Tribunal within the first fourteen days of detention .
17 The third main proposal is that a buyer who has a right to reject the goods should not be faced with an all-or-nothing rule .
18 A man must divorce his wife if he can not get on with her ; she has a right to petition for divorce if he refuses to have sex with her .
19 She has a right to do what she chooses with her time , and interference often makes matters worse .
20 She has a right to know , before anybody else tells her . ’
21 The infant Elizabeth will learn that being promised a sweet for behaving herself will result in more than the mere probability of its arrival ; the penny will have dropped when she realises that a promise entitles her to the reward — it is her due , to which she has a right .
22 ‘ She is Ma 's daughter , after all , Carrie , and she has a right to know , ’ Julia said .
23 He even suggests that a threat to deprive a woman of something she has a right to expect should not necessarily be sufficient .
24 She has a right to be angry .
25 Roughly , unilateralism provides that the plaintiff must win if he or she has a right to win established in the explicit extension of some legal convention , but that otherwise the defendant must win .
26 The country of Boaz becomes her country , she is no longer a foreigner here now she has a right to stay because of Boaz And we are citizens of a new country , of a new kingdom .
27 One is tempted to say that consent is valid if one has a right that the normative consequences will not occur without one 's consent .
28 As far as this representative model is concerned procedural entitlements are viewed in purely instrumental terms , according to the contribution they may be expected to make to the accuracy of the underlying substantive policy judgments , and since no one has a right to a particular policy outcome , no one has aright either to any particular form of decision-making process .
29 This brings us on to the second of Dworkin 's grounds for excluding such background policy issues from the jurisdiction of the courts , for if no one has a right to any particular form of decision-making process — whether a right to a hearing itself , a right to cross-examine witnesses or to be given reasons for a decision -this can only be because such a right can not be derived from the master principle of equal concern and respect .
30 No one has a right to foster or adopt .
  Next page