Example sentences of "available to a [adj -er] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Not only have the basic building blocks of the computer become smaller and cheaper , and hence more readily available to a greater number of people , the language of the computer has become much more accessible to the lay person . |
2 | He also announced three priorities : making cultural affairs available to a wider public ; promoting French culture abroad and breaking down the divide between privileged Paris on the one hand and France 's provinces and deprived outer city suburbs on the other . |
3 | Eligibility criteria for farm development plans are being relaxed ( the comparable non-agricultural income comparison is proposed for abolition ) so such plans will be available to a wider range of farmers . |
4 | Similar training methods were used and , with the publication of many of the ILT materials ( Yates , Christmas and Wilson , 1981 ) these approaches became available to a wider range of trainers . |
5 | The success of a pilot standby scheme run for students at Teesside Plytechnic prompted the idea of making it available to a wider student audience , said theatre manager Lynn Hardman . |
6 | Both projects are , in the medium and long term , going to make the resources of the Library available to a wider group of users , and to facilitate more detailed research work which at the moment can not be undertaken , because of the state of the collections . |
7 | The transformation from hard to soft back in no way dilutes the presentation of the writings in order to attract a different type of reader , rather it makes available to a wider audience , a collection of historical character studies at a more attractive price , something that , in this day and age , we should all be grateful for . |
8 | The means by which much of the information held and generated at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is made available to a wider audience is in the form of publications . |
9 | The British Government should press for all agricultural development plans , which are likely to be broadened in their scope and available to a larger proportion of ( particularly smaller ) farms , to be agreed with conservation authorities before they can be adopted . |