Example sentences of "access to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 1 The 80/20 case When 20 per cent of the records generate 80 per cent of the accesses to a file , and the file is loaded in a random order , the percentage of accesses to synonyms will be the same as the percentage of synonyms ; if the file is 90 per cent packed and randomized to individual record storage positions , accesses to synonyms will be 34.063 per cent of all accesses .
2 To analyse this , the frequency curve in Fig. 6.22 ( case 3 ) is constructed relating the percentage of accesses to the file to the percentage of records loaded at any cumulative percentage of records loaded , using the methods shown in Appendix 8 .
3 An independent lender has access to every insurance company .
4 Anyone searching the resultant database by means of a computer terminal has almost instantaneous access to every item in the newspaper .
5 Because they are vertical these looms allow the weaver easy access to every point across the width of the rug , and it is possible to produce much wider rugs .
6 She lowered her voice to a whisper , ‘ … you should know that everyone has access to every typewriter in the newsroom .
7 Personally I would have preferred a review of what software exists , and whether I require access to a PC or a Cray supercomputer .
8 Participants remote from Henley must have access to a PC and modem as well as adequate library facilities .
9 Farmers change their minds about access to a river at the last minute , according to the vagaries of the harvest .
10 I am delighted that in a rapidly expanding area like Haughton young families will now have easy access to a nursery for their children .
11 It is particularly useful if you have access to a park to place the clues in .
12 The proposers , Neil McLean and Mel Collier , head and deputy head of library services at PCL , wanted to see what could usefully be done in the way of library automation using networked microcomputers rather than the conventional multi-user access to a mainframe or large mini .
13 introduced rights to check certain personal records held on computer , and supported new rights of access to a range of government records ;
14 The aim of the exercise is to show that schools can have free ( bar the cost of the adaptor ) and easy access to a range of educational software .
15 To be an international athlete , a top flight boxer or a first division footballer is to have access to a range of resources not available to the majority of the population .
16 Among other facilities , members receive the quarterly O50 Magazine ; there is a project called Age Works to help with job-hunting ; and additionally , members have access to a range of discounts including favourable travel and insurance rates .
17 Its goal is to offer easy access to a range of databases , which will be of use to the individual business user .
18 SAS supports access to a range of mainframe , personal computer and Unix database managers and spreadsheets and will run from day one on DEC 's Alpha RISC boxes under Open VMS and OSF/1 when they are launched .
19 Clearly it is not possible to rely on this form of public transport for commuting to work or for visits to local towns for access to a range of services .
20 Clearly , Contact users had access to a range of facilities generally regarded as rehabilitative .
21 The fact is that unemployed people already have access to a range of programmes through the employment service , including job review workshops , which provide precisely that service for those who are unemployed .
22 Students who successfully complete an agreed ‘ profile ’ are guaranteed access to a range of further courses in the college , including the general SVQ at level III , the new HNC in Social Care , social studies , childcare , and our access to nursing programme .
23 If the concentration of production and distribution units becomes a major force in the transition to the SEM , there will be an inevitable tendency for that concentration to occur in the core regions which will probably not only contain relevant headquarters and production units , but will also guarantee proximity to markets and immediate access to a range of supporting service functions .
24 Management is increasingly concerned , particularly during economic recession , to be able to monitor the day-to-day performance of the organisation , such as cash-flow , and therefore they desire access to a range of operational figures .
25 As a direct consequence of the Torrie proposal it is also understood that the university 's application for its collections to be granted nationally registered status — giving access to a range of vital funding — is likely to be rejected by the Museum and Galleries Commission .
26 They may instead become increasingly determined to gain access to a school in a nearby LEA with a ‘ better class ’ of pupil , irrespective of how well that school is doing for its intake .
27 Being a discursive subject and speaking are a matter of having access to a mirror , and it is not insignificant that a male subject is initially in control of the retrovizor .
28 British public libraries have in the past 10 years diversified very considerably by providing their public with access to a variety of non-book materials .
29 Borland 's Quattro Pro users , for example , have access to a variety of PC databases of the xBASE type , such as dBase or Borland 's own Paradox .
30 All viewers have a right of access to a variety of programmes , at prime viewing time , which respond to their requirements concerning information , culture and entertainment without any other restriction than payment of a fee .
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