Example sentences of "[noun pl] have [adj] access " in BNC.

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1 He asked why the council would not accept orange badge drivers having total access during the scheme 's six month trial period .
2 Where the material to be used in enquiry work is audio-visual ( as for instance a filmstrip , perhaps with the accompanying booklet transcribed on to audio-cassette so that the eye can concentrate on the pictures and the slower readers have quick access to the text ) then of course suitable equipment must be available in sufficient quantity for the expected numbers of students at any one time .
3 He said that the company had admitted liability for the car but pointed out that all their drivers have immediate access to facilities to correct any vehicle defects .
4 But in the advanced technologies , up to our own time , it has been almost impossible for working companies to have direct access to their relevant means of production , and a third form of the division of labour then appears , and in capitalist conditions becomes stable and regular .
5 A Rail Regulator will ensure that all companies have fair access to the track and will make sure that those who win the franchises honour the terms of their contract .
6 A new Rail Regulator — who will ensure that all companies have fair access to the track — will award the franchises and make sure that the franchisees honour the terms of the contract .
7 The advantage is that executables have full access to the computer when loaded .
8 The large majority of the illiterate labouring classes had sufficient access to the written word through the mediation of literate family members , friends or workmates .
9 Guests have free access to the nearby lake-side swimming area and there 's a small squadron of bikes for hire .
10 More than one and a half thousand local police stations have online access to the computer .
11 The SIB , for its part , takes the view that there should be trading and price determining systems which ensure that all qualified participants have equitable access to the market ; and so that market prices can adequately reflect prevailing forces of supply and demand .
12 The cattle were either ‘ walked ’ down to the marshes direct from market or were brought to the nearest point by train : today they are transported by motor-lorries , and in recent years a rough road has been built right across the marshes to enable lorries to have direct access .
13 The ancient Egyptians had ready access to gold , mined as well as alluvial , in the eastern desert , and had already been in contact with south-west Asia during their Predynastic phase .
14 The reasoning offered by the court centred on the fact that such persons had special access to inside information which arose from communications they had received from primary insiders .
15 Certainly the generals had direct access to the Assembly , and could propose motions : one inscription ( Syll.132 ) opens with the formula ‘ by the motion of the generals ’ .
16 Thirty practices with a combined list of 175 417 patients had open access to the radiology services provided by the district .
17 The birthplace of this new industry was Chicago , and Chicago is still the global centre of the financial futures and options industry , though by the 1990s virtually all respectable financial centres have local access to at least one derivative assets exchange .
18 My Lords , the G P funding hold er fund holders issue is not an issue in this case , er G P fund holders patients have direct access to any departments as do every other patient in the country er where a person needs accidents er and emergency treatment , My Lords they get it .
19 While users have automatic access to modules managed by the hierarchy of users on their branch of the family tree , it is possible for certain users outwith this structure to have access to another user 's modules , if so required .
20 Any comprehensive community care system must ensure that all service users have ready access to skilled help from someone who is trained to assess their entitlements , to negotiate on their behalf with the Department of Social Security and other agencies , to assist with budgeting , offer financial advice and , where the individual desires it , hold benefit books and cheque books and arrange for regular bills to be paid and financial commitments to be planned .
21 Experienced users have direct access to the main data files using the INFO relational database management system query language .
22 This password , known only to LIFESPAN RDBI , ensures that no unauthorised users have direct access to the database .
23 Nevertheless , this approach has been included in the Department of Health guidelines ( DHSS 1984 ) with the recommendation that it is essential that each new intake of junior medical staff receives adequate psychiatric training in the assessment of attempted suicide patients , and that the physicians have regular access to psychiatrists to ensure that clinical standards are maintained .
24 Surely a Division should be brought to a conclusion only when hon. Members have unimpeded access to the House in accordance with the Sessional Orders .
25 Members have direct access to the contract from their offices , which is particularly attractive to those with a limited presence on the trading floor but an active interest in the Japanese bond market .
26 Leaving aside for now the question of whether big business in modern Japan is really the reincarnation of the zaibatsu , there is no doubt that business leaders have preferential access to the political process through a variety of channels .
27 ‘ The town hall was used for the toxic waste inquiry and the Butler Sloss inquiry and people affected by the issues had ready access , he said . ’
28 It seems appropriate therefore that disruptive pupils have full access to the curriculum which requires that schools acknowledge this in their planning .
29 First , women and men have different access to resources which could be shared , especially financial resources .
30 Field men have ready access to consent documents and will treat as relevant the degree to which standards are exceeded .
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