Example sentences of "are [adv] [verb] [noun sg] to " in BNC.
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1 | As a result , many who are genuinely aggrieved by apparently unlawful decisions by government bodies and public officials are effectively denied access to justice . |
2 | There are other reasons why women are unable to build up sufficient National Insurance contributions and are thereby denied access to unemployment benefit . |
3 | They are generally arranged back to back , and a rough little relief of Roman date shows that then at least they were so set . |
4 | They are generally fed whole to sheep , although this can cause older ewes to shed their incisor teeth prematurely and thus shorten their useful lives . |
5 | She is trying to make explicit what lies hidden at another level , one which the participants , whether schooled or unschooled , are not drawing attention to themselves : the cognitive level . |
6 | We are not given access to her private emotional struggles , but we are clear that she can not reject social values . |
7 | Disorganized capitalism remains capitalism , and they make it clear that they are not bidding farewell to the working class . |
8 | Because this information is not widely enough known , many individuals or families are not claiming help to which they are entitled and for which in many cases they have actually paid through their national insurance contributions . |
9 | It will be said that we are not doing justice to the viewpoint of the opposing group . |
10 | The beliefs which , he suggests , play this special role for us now include the belief that I have two hands , that men do not fly to the moon , that the sun is not a hole in the sky , that the earth has existed during the last century and that our hands do not disappear when we are not paying attention to them . |
11 | This is one area of the golf swing that simply has to be learned correctly if you are ever to play golf to your full potential . |
12 | Both direct approaches and efforts to set up regional recruitment events are yielding positive results in four of the regions and we are still awaiting response to the other four . |
13 | They are also restricting access to their markets , which will minimise the economic dislocation and the ultimate loss of industrial base . |
14 | Three other people are also awaiting committal to the same court accused of similar offences . |
15 | If an award should be made , it can only order the assisted party to pay such of those costs as are reasonable having regard to all the circumstances , particularly the financial resources of the parties and their conduct in connection with the dispute . |
16 | And what the commentators are really paying homage to , what prompts their sense of coherence and a world revealed , is a feat of illusionist sorcery . |
17 | These rather sweeping generalisations are now giving way to a more mature analysis of the contradictions of science and technology . |
18 | These are two respects in which the reformed law would not achieve maximum certainty , and those who argue that the terms would ‘ cause little problem of interpretation ’ are surely giving way to unwarranted optimism . |
19 | He has no background in the computer business but extensive experience in marketing and management according to DEC ; he is also Japanese , in an age when US companies are increasingly moving management to Japanese executives . |
20 | Among its aims are increasingly to devolve responsibility to area offices , to set performance targets and to secure that policies on the grant and continuation of legal aid are applied consistently . |
21 | FRENCH OBSTETRICIAN and natural childbirth guru , Michel Odent , claims that men are increasingly falling victim to ‘ couvade ’ , literally , hatching pains . |
22 | However , if he suspects that the adventurers are here to cause harm to his Master , he 'll die rather than help them at all . |
23 | We are here to say goodbye to our brother , Steven , who is departing for the land of the married . |
24 | During their isolation , they are reportedly denied access to legal counsel and family visits and are at risk of systematic torture and ill-treatment . |
25 | ‘ The musicians in the gallery are about to put flute to lips and fingers to lyre . ’ |
26 | Chair , on the recommendations erm on item D , I 'm a bit unhappy about the use of the term ‘ natural ’ disasters , because I believe that many of the disasters that people in Oxford are actually giving money for are man made disasters , particularly matters of international economics and the unfair burden , erm unfair distribution of wealth which places a whole sector of the world in poverty , and I think , you know , you do get a magnificent response from people in Oxford to these charities , and we must be aware that there are a whole number of greater issues involved , and while I hear what you 're saying earlier on about you ca n't take on the problems of the whole world , I think when people are actually giving money to charities for example , like Oxfam , they are often unaware of these issues , and we do have a wider role in making the , joining with organisations like Oxfam in spreading public awareness on these issues . |
27 | The poor are actually giving aid to the rich . |