Example sentences of "[art] [noun] have [noun] to [adj] " in BNC.

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1 For the courts to have regard to Parliamentary material might necessitate changes in Parliamentary procedures to ensure that ministerial statements are sufficiently detailed to be taken into account .
2 Each of the groups has access to such resources , but only as and when required .
3 ‘ Well , as you know , Mr Caretaker , all the Chapter have keys to all the doors except the Bishop 's door . ’
4 This might occur if general practices encouraged a partner with a special interest in diabetes to care for their diabetic patients ; if practices are well equipped as part of a commitment to quality of care ; if the practice has access to dietitian services — most appropriately , perhaps , through the training of practice nurses in dietetics ; and , in such well organised practices , if only those patients with special problems are referred to hospital diabetic clinics .
5 The theory that the poet had access to deep and primitive levels put him awkwardly alongside the Romantic ‘ explorers ’ .
6 Only when the critic has access to all the sources which were at the disposal of the editor can his findings be absolutely certain .
7 Nottingham Crown Court was told that by the age of nine weeks , the child had fractures to both collar bones , both legs and an arm as well as a broken skull .
8 This revealed that astonishingly rapid progress had taken place , such that the greater part of the county had in operation schemes based on the Haycocks II model , so that the majority of the population had access to some training on these lines .
9 In 1977 , only 45% of the population had access to public health services and 9% to the private sector .
10 Where once the banks had access to regulated supplies of cheap money , they now have to raise nearly 70% of their funds in the open market .
11 There is no duty upon the Commissioner to have regard to these vague considerations which should therefore not be seen as a potential fetter on the Commissioner 's discretion .
12 On the other hand , polycentric disputes can only be satisfactorily resolved if the solution takes account of the interests of all affected parties and if the decision-maker has access to all relevant information and opinions from whatever quarter they come .
13 Section 33(3) requires the court to have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to : ( a ) the length of , and the reasons for , the delay on the part of the plaintiff ; ( b ) the extent to which , having regard to the delay , the evidence adduced or likely to be adduced by the plaintiff or the defendant is or is likely to be less cogent than if the action had been brought within the time allowed by s11 or ( as the case may be ) by s12 ; ( c ) the conduct of the defendant after the cause of action arose , including the extent ( if any ) to which he responded to requests reasonably made by the plaintiff for information or inspection for the purpose of ascertaining facts which were or might be relevant to the plaintiff 's cause of action against the defendant ; ( d ) the duration of any disability of the plaintiff arising after the date of the accrual of the cause of action ; ( e ) the extent to which the plaintiff acted promptly and reasonably once he knew whether or not the act or omission of the defendant , to which the injury was attributable , might be capable at that time of giving rise to an action for damages ; ( f ) the steps , if any , taken by the plaintiff to obtain medical , legal or other expert advice and the nature of any such advice he may have received .
14 All the twenty-six letters of the alphabet have links to all the words at the word detector level .
15 The first , and simplest , is where the government has access to better information than the private sector ; the second is where consumers have better access than producers to information about current shocks .
16 Sometimes the justification is that the government has access to better information than the private sector and judges the true social cost to be in excess of the private cost .
17 It does not rely for its efficacy on the government having access to better information for , as we have said , firms may well be able to anticipate the rise in aggregate demand between period 1 and 2 .
18 The structure has similarities to one half of the double roller eddy of wakes ( Fig. 21.11 ) .
19 Although based at Jordanstown , the system has links to other sites across the province by utilising the recent advances in telecommunications services supported by the EC STAR Programme .
20 These implied ancillary rights may be excluded by agreement ; but the tenant 's adviser should not agree to their exclusion unless the tenant has access to delimited loading bays and an express right to load and unload .
21 Since his recent appointment Mr Clayton has at no time had access to any medical evidence relating to the nine children .
22 Since it was perfectly possible for an individual to have loyalties to several overlords , betrayal was not uncommon .
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