Example sentences of "be denied [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They 're denied the chance though are n't they ?
2 It is important that the profligate use of resources is avoided ; otherwise some patients will be denied a benefit because of the misdirection of limited resources .
3 The Centre for Policy on Ageing campaigned heartily about this , arguing that this ancient , centuries-old right , steeped in Anglo-Saxon tradition , should not be denied a quarter of the nation 's adult citizenry .
4 But since in trusts it is accepted that intention should be regarded , I replied that it was absurd , when the first substitution had not taken effect , that the granddaughter should be denied a claim for a share , since her grandfather wanted her to have the whole if the second brother had also received his brother 's share .
5 Later the same year , he was to be denied a place in the British Olympic football team on the grounds that he was a professional cricketer .
6 A curiosity about this year 's Masters is that Scotland , the home of golf , will be denied a view of today 's proceedings .
7 Independents provide almost identical products for lower prices and motorists should not be denied the chance of buying them . ’
8 ENGLAND 'S players will be denied the chance of pumping themselves up by singing the national anthem on the pitch before Saturday 's Test against South Africa at Twickenham .
9 Its issue presupposes that some function of the body remains to be performed , and this sets an internal time limit after which the order could not issue ( although an applicant can be denied the order because of undue delay even before the expiry of this time ) .
10 Children may be denied the possibility of such abuse being detected .
11 Under the scheme , which could become a draft directive by the end of the year , motorists would be denied the choice of purchasing parts from the largely cheaper independent suppliers .
12 Goldstein argues that if a patient is capable of consenting to ordinary therapy , and if both incarceration and experimental surgery are approved social practices , a person should not be denied the choice .
13 Offenders were to be denied the sacrament by the local priest .
14 Why , for example , should the contributories and creditors of an unregistered company be denied the protection , enjoyed in the case of a registered company , of those provisions which require a receiver to be a licensed insolvency practitioner ?
15 He can be denied the nomination only by an extraordinary blocking coalition of ‘ super-delegates ’ — party bigwigs who make up nearly a fifth of the voting delegates at the convention — and delegates already won by Tsongas and by Brown , plus a handful of delegates ( more than a tenth of the total ) who are already pledged as ‘ uncommitted ’ .
16 The only other way Clinton could be denied the nomination is if yet another scandal breaks out — perhaps proof positive of his alleged affair with Gennifer Flowers — and he voluntarily withdraws .
17 The outposts of Imperialism in the Third World are to be denied the support of Imperialist powers .
18 If Soviet Russia is to be denied the hegemony of Europe , the United Kingdom must continue in existence as the principal power in Western Europe economically and militarily .
19 He said Labour would be denied the opportunity to re-erect the interventionist policies promised in the policy review .
20 Such a motion is exempted business , so that the House in question can not be denied the opportunity to pass upon the matter simply by government manipulation of time , but in relation to the vast majority of instruments , opposition is pointless and rarely mounted .
21 I 'm just annoyed that so many Liverpudlians will be denied the opportunity to support the lads and frighten the life out of the Russians .
22 Elderly patients should not necessarily be denied the operation if they are fit and have normal anal function .
23 Many felt that to be denied the use of a fishing net for 4 months each year was the removal of a fundamental human right .
24 There is no express disqualification from voting in the case of mental patients other than the general reference to ‘ any legal incapacity to vote ’ in s.1(l) ( b ) ( i ) of the 1983 Act but it is generally considered that any person who , at the moment of voting , lacked capacity to understand what he was immediately about to do , whether by reason of mental illness or drunkenness , etc. , could be denied the right to vote by the presiding officer at the poll .
25 Labour 's suspicions were immediately aroused that Asquith 's speech at the National Liberal Club was part of an ‘ Establishment ’ plot to deny Labour fair play , and that a Labour government defeated in the Commons would be denied the right which other governments had enjoyed , of an immediate dissolution .
26 Now it would seem that they are not only to be denied an increase , but also to be faced with a reduction .
27 To be told so little — to such an end — and still , finally , to be denied an explanation
28 A person who is involved in a criminal act at the time he is injured may be denied an action .
29 Would a rescuer be denied an action on the ground of ex turpi causa , e.g. if one burglar was injured attempting to assist another who had been placed in danger by the dangerous condition of the house they were breaking into ?
30 In the second half , the silence was golden , but the ears of the referee and the Darlington keeper were ringing loud enough when Hereford were denied a winner .
  Next page