Example sentences of "who have [art] right " in BNC.

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1 The one who has a right to dispose of it is the one who has created it .
2 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 .
3 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' .
4 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 .
5 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 .
6 Who has the right to ordain that I should be the one to go mad in this house , with a senile old woman of almost ninety years ?
7 If she 's particularly fond of someone who has Alzheimer 's and wants to help him by producing a foetus , who has the right to say no ?
8 What we can do , though , is to illustrate , by example , who has the right in any given situation .
9 In what terms do Armenians and Azeris argue about who has the right to Mountain Karabakh , which is in Azerbaijan , but inhabited mainly by Armenians ?
10 If a Protocol party acts in material breach of the Protocol , who has the right of termination or suspension ?
11 The answer he gave was that the only ground of legitimacy is to be found in the general will of the people , as only the people can say who has the right to rule them .
12 Prosecutor : Do you appreciate that she is a person who has the right to refuse ?
13 A person who has the right to immediate possession of the land and enters in exercise of that right , is then deemed to have been in possession ever since the accrual of the right of entry .
14 The agreement must make it clear who has the right to exercise the power : all the other partners acting unanimously or just a majority ( simple or special ) .
15 Some tradesman who has the right of access ? ’
16 And also , in that we , in that verse the first use of the word relative is that very near kinsman , and the second use , right at the end , one of our closest relatives , it 's the word that is used there that means the one who has the right to redeem .
17 When the teller announced the Magharba vote at 1235 , implying a Magharba majority , the Zuwaya immediately protested that Magharba were present who had no right to vote : after a check of identity cards some men left and they began the vote again , this time counting both groups of supporters as they passed behind their goals .
18 It felt as though the tree he was sitting in and the green leaves all around him belonged to another world altogether and that he was a trespasser who had no right to be where he was .
19 Following their defeat at the Wiltshire election of 1713 , the Whig candidates petitioned the House of Commons , complaining that the under-sheriff , in collusion with the two Tory candidates , had delayed opening the poll until the afternoon , " when many freeholders , who would have voted for the petitioners , were necessitated , by reason of the harvest , to go away without voting " , and also that he had " refused those who voted for the petitioners , and had a right ; and polled others amongst them , who had no right " .
20 None were to be relieved who had a right to the benefit of the Insolvent Act currently going through Parliament , except by paying their clearance fees .
21 We shall need in time to check which belong to people who had a right to handle the diary ; Sir Paul , yourself , members of the household .
22 I also remind the Minister that the then Prime Minister , the right hon. Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) , told me in a letter that we had every right to help organise a campaign for former employees of British Shipbuilders , who had a right to 13 weeks unemployment or supplementary benefit .
23 The most important common feature among them was that they did not have absolute rights over the land which they farmed , but that they were in some way dependent on a lord , who had a right to some part of their labour or their profits from the land .
24 A proclamation was issued in 1718 against " unlawful Clubs , Combinations , etc. " of wool combers and weavers : … which had illegally presumed to use a Common Seal , and to act as Bodies Corporate , by making and unlawfully conspiring to execute certain Bylaws or Orders , whereby they pretend to determine who had a right to the Trade , what and how many Apprentices and Journeymen each man should keep at once , together with the prices of all their Manufactures , and the manner and materials of which they should be wrought ; and that , when many of the said Conspiritors wanted work , because their Masters would not submit to such pretended Orders and unreasonable Demands , they fed them with Money , till they could again get employment , in order to oblige their masters to employ them for want of other hands .
25 In Denco Ltd. v Joinson [ 1991 ] , an employee who had a right of access to certain information in his employer 's computer system used another employee 's password to gain access to other parts of the computer system , something he was not entitled to do .
26 Yet the tradition of the Germanic tribes was that judgement should be pronounced by the whole body of freemen , by all the ‘ suitors ’ , all those who had the right and duty of regular attendance at the court ; and the jurisdiction of the old royal and popular courts was cut across here , there and everywhere by the numerous feudal courts erected in increasing numbers on the basis of royal grant or mere usurpation from the ninth century onwards , and in the eleventh and twelfth by the appearance of borough courts and town courts of various kinds and courts which merchants set up to handle their own problems , which could hardly be handled by the warrior president or the yokel suitors of a popular court .
27 The result was a victory for Herwald and commonsense , $15,000 for charities and the loss of a potential $500,000 in legal fees for lawyers who might otherwise have been called upon the resolve a dispute over who had the right to use the slogan ‘ Plane Smart ’ .
28 Two days after the interview , Sutton 's appointment was ratified by the Founders , who had the right , as holders of the Golden Share , to veto his appointment if they chose .
29 When Vatican II met , the 1917 Code of Canon Law determined who had the right to attend .
30 It was , moreover , generally a patronage source for government itself , and no ordinary burgh or county member of parliament would have much concern with it , though George Dempster of Dunnichen , when member of parliament for the Dundee district , thought it worth his while to attempt an approach to Lord Cassillis , who had the right of presentation to the chair of humanity in the University of St. Andrews , to seek that appointment for political advantage .
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