Example sentences of "who have [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 Mr. A. J. Beith ( On behalf of the House of Commons Commission ) : The Computer Officer , who has responsibility to both Houses for computer developments planned for Parliament as a whole , has a staff of two assistant computer officers , one of whom is on secondment to the House , and one full-time and one part-time secretary .
2 ‘ Decisions about who has access to the gene should not be in private hands in the first place , ’ he said .
3 The reader who has access to the copyright libraries — which in Britain are the British Library Reference Division ( better known still as the British Museum Library ) , the national libraries of Scotland and Wales and the university libraries of Oxford , Cambridge and Trinity College Dublin — can gain access to practically everything published in the UK since these libraries receive ‘ copyright ’ copies of all books , journals and most pamphlets and research reports .
4 These will influence what education and training is available to support transition , how it is managed in an area , and who has access to it .
5 he is an officer or employee of that company or a related company who has access to unpublished price sensitive information which ought not reasonably to be disclosed except for the proper performance of his duties ; or
6 The pilot trainee in the left hand seat , with the flight-instructor in the right hand seat , who has access to twelve key locked emergency simulation switches .
7 A woman who has access to this information can start to take decisions about motherhood and her own sexuality .
8 The Minister , who has access to more information than I have and who is ably supported by his civil servants , may be able to give us more news on that front this morning .
9 Repeat the operation with another user who has access to the DC .
10 For heaven 's sake , who has access to all her jewellery ? ’
11 It is incumbent upon every Muslim who has access to this mercenary author to drive this harmful being out of the way of Muslims and punish him , ’ he added in a report from the Iranian news agency IRNA .
12 They were people who had reason to be suspicious , or they would not have paid so highly for Hayman 's services .
13 Commissioners were appointed on either side to work out an agreed formula which would cover differences in legal systems , taxation discrepancies , the coinages — which were still quite distinct — and above all the religious rights of Episcopalians , Presbyterians , Cameronians and others who had reason to be wary of the Church of England .
14 It seems , moreover , that from the 1830s and 1840s there was a distinct switch in literary representation of the type of women who had recourse to abortion : no longer was it just the seduced domestic , but the married and unmarried working women , particularly factory women in the textile areas of Lancashire .
15 The ordinary palace Household was rarely seen , except by those who had access to the Court , but it was no less splendid , though less exotic than the Military .
16 The foreigners resident in Paris were represented not only by their Ambassadors but frequently by non-official persons who had access to the Court , such as the American socialite Lillie Moulton .
17 Clearly , many parents in the area were not judging the school in the same way as HMI , who had access to a different range of information .
18 There were several other people who had access to the accounts , Spencer Grenfell for one .
19 There it was held that those persons who had access to inside information were required to observe the ‘ abstain or disclose ’ principle ie they had either to disclose the inside information which they held or abstain from trading .
20 Phetam had been stolen from Ardakke by someone who had no shortage of credits to spend and who had access to the secretive practices of diplomats and Emissaries .
21 As an individual who had access to this information he felt that he could not , in all conscience , keep quiet about it .
22 But there was no class distinction for the men , who had access to a subterranean ‘ gentlemen 's court ’ 800 ft. long and 40 ft. wide , with marble floors , white-tiled walls , bathrooms , boot-cleaning , and a hairdressing salon , as well as the actual lavatories .
23 But letters could be dealt with and bills paid by anyone who had access to the flat , and we knew that at least one other person had a key .
24 Maidservants who had access to storecupboards and the family silver .
25 Someone who had access to that information .
26 they 're good for patronage , they encourage people who have money to er , to put it into the arts , they 're they promote stability and they they save us from a dictatorship , is that it ?
27 And what does it matter to us , ordinary businesspeople , who have day to day jobs to do which certainly do not involve make or break run-ins with unions ?
28 Those who have recourse to the deus ex machina of lethal rays or thunderbolts from outer space may incline to the former view , but only at the expense of disregarding the abundant evidence in the stratigraphic record of a correlation between mass extinctions and physical events on earth ( Hallam , 1981c ) .
29 Recently it has been found that those old people who either have pets of their own or who have access to animals are often actually healthier — and are certainly happier — than those who have no such contact .
30 Social analysts and critics have pointed out that mass media — newspapers , television and radio — are used by those who have access to them .
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