Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] access to a " in BNC.

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1 The middle-class parent who is dissatisfied with the quality of school rarely has access to a parochial or private school option .
2 If , however , we have opportunities to fish midweek when most other anglers are at work , or fortunate enough to have access to a good piece of barbel river which is less frequently fished , then the best way of catching a big barbel is to stalk one .
3 After R. v. Samuel the police underwent a painful education , as a series of people charged with serious crimes on the basis of admissions went free because they had been wrongly denied access to a solicitor .
4 He was able to checkmate the French evolutionists ' efforts to use the duck-billed platypus as a link between reptiles and mammals because he alone had access to a good supply of specimens .
5 Ms Kiernan 's study shows that fewer than half of all single mothers living alone have access to a telephone , and a mere 15% to that essential tool of modern motherhood , a car .
6 Almost 40% of Japanese still do not have access to a flushing toilet .
7 So a choice of background was easy , but if you do not have access to a piece of the relevant dress you can either cheat and buy a similar fabric , or choose a plain white silk or satin backing .
8 I think that its , its choice that 's something we have n't sort of looked at tonight , I think its the important er factor in a fact that we 've got an audience here with a large representative er percentage of er access to a car and certainly erm I working in the transport field in West Central Scotland , er that is not the case , in Glasgow where the car ownership is something in the order of seventy per cent of the population do not have access to a car or do not have access in a household , we , you are then talking , you have to look very , very seriously at what public transport must provide in order to meet just day , day to day activities and I think that this choice aspect is something that is absolutely vital as the lady in front says .
9 We welcome the advice that new retail development should be sited so as to reduce the number and length of car journeys and to provide for those who do not have access to a car .
10 A special link is used in conjunction with passwords and allows users who do not normally have access to a user 's modules without supplying a valid password ( as they are in a different branch of the user tree ) .
11 So easily did the rational fear of not being able to exchange their products so advantageously merge , for a whole generation , into the absurdity of supposing that they could somehow have access to a source of wealth other than their own production .
12 Many of you will already have access to a personal computer and most of you will have access to one in the future .
13 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 .
14 You will probably have to consult colleagues to gain some of this information and you will also need access to a library to research the alternative delivery system you have chosen to examine .
15 The centre also has access to a number of marketing-oriented databases that contain full-text market reports , company information and extracts from trade journals and the press .
16 MAS also has access to a research facility comprising many proprietary databases recording corporate information and sector deal history in order to support the following :
17 It also gives access to a bibliography containing hundreds of documents on clean technology and a directory of contacts .
18 Nor did it escape his attention that as well as its social role Heaven also gave access to a large group of demonstrably big spenders .
19 Students who have reached this level also need access to a good source of general knowledge , and particularly of British and American cultural information .
20 Since the advice scheme now permitted access to a solicitor on any question of English law and the advertising campaign which launched it stressed the ‘ social welfare ’ problems now within the scheme , it was disappointing that the first evidence of usage showed little deviation from the traditional pattern .
21 The forecasts that every British family would by now have access to a car ( the thinking behind the design of Milton Keynes and other new towns ) were plainly wrong .
22 Held , dismissing the action , that the statutory framework leading to the grant of planning permission envisaged that a local planning authority would balance the interests of the community against those of individuals ; that where a planning authority had granted consent to the development of an area , the measure of disturbance to individuals had to be considered against the changed character of the neighbourhood and those living close to a public highway affected by that change had to accept the increased volume of traffic in the greater public interest ; and that , accordingly , since as a result of planning permission the two roads now gave access to a commercial dock operating 24 hours a day , the serious disturbance to individuals from the movement of heavy goods vehicles was not an actionable nuisance ( post , pp. 460G–H , 461A–C , H — 462B , C–F ) .
23 While in manu institutions , ‘ contextual ’ or ‘ critical ’ studies have traditionally provided a bridge for those who want to pursue more theoretical aspects of gender and creativity , they now have access to a more diverse range of feminist ideas and approaches .
24 If you are staying in a caravan or tent and do n't have access to a refrigerator , buy food only as you need it .
25 Your investment will buy units in that fund and you will therefore have access to a far wider-ranging portfolio of investments than most individuals could realistically set up and manage on their own .
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