Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] [vb infin] access to " in BNC.
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1 | She reiterated the Governments view ’ first expressed by us in 1985 that the majority of full-time students should not have access to benefits as a means of supporting themselves whilst studying . ’ |
2 | I have also accepted the advice of a number of organisations , including the TUC , that , for security reasons , union members should not have access to the names and addresses of other union members . |
3 | All the best books on cat care insist that cats should always have access to fresh , clean water and that the water should be changed regularly . |
4 | What you can and must do , however , is ensure that all the investigators are expert in every sense in the techniques of investigation and au fait with all aspects of operating modern aircraft , particularly the large public transport types , but they must also have access to reliable and impartial specialists in the type of aircraft concerned . |
5 | I do n't see why you should n't have access to those . ’ |
6 | Individuals may not have access to private transport to substitute for inadequate public provision ; they may not be able to obtain a lift when necessary and they may not possess a telephone or the resources to obtain a car or phone . |
7 | First , women may not have access to relatives who are able or willing to respond . |
8 | One of the significant benefits of using the medium of the free newspapers is that the information will get to those special needs groups ( women , ethnic , disabled ) who , for a variety of reasons , may not have access to other newspapers . |
9 | Therefore , and I think we 'll all take access to something that we would . |
10 | Behind the industrial revolution were a series of major historical transformations , including the abandonment of popular culture by the European elites after 1500 such that the concept of culture itself became more closely related to hierarchy , but was combined with a growth in literacy and other resources by means of which lower status groups might also gain access to the new high culture ( see Burke 1978 : 270 and Mukerji 1983 for pre-1800 ; Williams 1961 for post-1800 ) . |
11 | A recent assessment estimated that the IRA may still have access to up to eight tons . |
12 | surveyor could not gain access to roof voids but concluded was in reasonable condition for its age . |
13 | I find it extra-ordinary that the police could not get access to these files simply because it was 5.30 and the office was shut . |
14 | 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 . |
15 | The Trainee Solicitors ' Group , arguing that the lack of grants may well limit access to the profession for those without private means , launched a loans and grants campaign and held a mass lobby of Parliament . |
16 | From the list given in the book , he chooses only herbs which grow in wet places that the fish would naturally have access to . |
17 | Candidates shall not have access to examination scripts . |
18 | Priority for Local People — this would further ensure access to existing housing and obviate the need for new development by giving first choice to a ‘ local band ’ of buyers and second choice to a ‘ semi-local band ’ . |
19 | And install a cattle trough which is , as far as we ho as far as we believe , vandal-proof , in that it 'll be a self-filling c er cistern filled cattle trough which the , the erm the , the ball float is actually contained in a erm a metal box so you ca n't get access to it . |
20 | A ninety day account you ca n't get access to . |
21 | The pupils would then have access to an OPAC ( On-line public access catalogue ) similar to those available in some polytechnics and universities at present . |
22 | Williams would certainly have access to candles , ’ he continued . |
23 | It is too simplistic to suggest that by offering improved opportunities in a less restrictive setting , individuals with often severe learning difficulties , frequently additional disabilities , and histories of damaging experiences , will thereby have access to improved , more satisfying life-styles . |
24 | The FMLN has argued that , no matter what type of medicine one practises , if health knowledge , skills and resources are sold on the market as commodities this will necessarily limit access to health care , fragment and distort the nature of the health process , constrain the relation between health workers and users , and undermine people 's control over their health . |
25 | Many of you will already have access to a personal computer and most of you will have access to one in the future . |
26 | further , as back-up and restore procedures are carried out by areas , a program with exclusive access to a particular area will not exclude access to other areas . |
27 | The bureau will not have access to clinical , medical or nursing notes about the patient . |
28 | A female fieldworker certainly will not have access to some of the characteristically male speech events recorded by Labov et al. |
29 | Channel compression technology will soon provide access to more than one hundred channels , spawning dozens of ‘ narrowcast ’ ‘ niche channels ’ such as Ovation . |
30 | ADULTS and school leavers in remote parts of Argyll and Bute will soon have access to further education colleges without having to travel . |