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

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1 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 .
2 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 .
3 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 ) .
4 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 .
5 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 .
6 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 .
7 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 :
8 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 .
9 It also gives access to a bibliography containing hundreds of documents on clean technology and a directory of contacts .
10 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 .
11 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 .
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