Example sentences of "[be] open to [adj] " in BNC.
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31 | What opportunity should be open to full-tome students in terms of work placement or experience ? |
32 | Hanson and the Museum of London say that ‘ as soon as practicable the site will be open to public view for a limited period . |
33 | And Deloitte says it is unlikely that British companies will be favoured over European rivals in the franchise round which will be open to public scrutiny . |
34 | Yet a statement of national intent concerning the learnings planned and provided for a nation 's youth is surely a document which should be available and one which needs to be open to public criticism . |
35 | An additional requirement is that each industrial site would have to publish a yearly environmental statement which would be open to public scrutiny . |
36 | One of Wyatt 's ‘ devices ’ are the writings by which he is known , and they too must be open to seasonal change as is fitting the conditions of survival . |
37 | The works of Hamilton which eventually appear on CD-ROM will be open to basic text retrieval but that will be about all . |
38 | Offenders , he claims , could be open to massive fines . |
39 | The RYA produces a booklet called ‘ Clubs for Newcomers ’ ( £1.50 from the RYA ) which lists over 400 clubs around the country which are open to new membership with a contact name of someone who knows the club well and could show you around . |
40 | Places on both squads are open to talented players , irrespective of their financial backgrounds ’ |
41 | The normal response to that suggestion is that children in rural schools must not be denied the educational opportunities which are open to other children . |
42 | According to Sheila Croft , Shell UK 's employee relations development policy adviser , the maternity policy ‘ dovetails with our schemes for job sharing , career breaks , working from home and part time working which are open to male and female employees ’ . |
43 | The former , which are open to full-time lecturers in further education establishments in Wales , lead either to the Post Graduate Certificate in Education ( Further Education ) or to the Certificate of Education ( Further Education ) and consist of two periods of eight weeks ' attendance at the Faculty of Education of the University College , interspersed with one year 's supervised teaching and tutorial sessions in the student 's own institutions . |
44 | As a consequence they pose real problems to the policy maker , practitioner and manager , who are expected to respond to a problem the magnitude and significance of which are open to wide and sometimes conflicting interpretations . |
45 | But when the ways of making a living that are open to small organisms have all been filled , there are still prosperous livings to be made by larger organisms . |
46 | Introduced by Cromadex , the classes are open to Protective Coatings and Marine and Yacht employees who work in the same building . |
47 | They argue that support acted as an antecedent protective factor , but as their data was not longitudinal , the relationships they found are open to alternative explanations . |
48 | We are open to alternative ideas from people of Hong Kong or from the Chinese side . ’ |
49 | The scholarships are open to young barristers and solicitors . |
50 | In the context of large-scale industry , I have already shown that a substantial part of the means of production is the object of possession by impersonal institutions — capitalist enterprises — and the object of socialism must be to reconstruct this impersonal possession in such a way that enterprises both follow a plan of production consistent with the maximum satisfaction of the democratically-constructed ‘ needs ’ of the working population as a whole , and are open to democratic participation , on equal footing , of the workers within the enterprise . |
51 | More advanced courses in Hebrew ( eg Dead Sea Scrolls , mystical texts ) and in related languages ( eg Ugaritic , Phoenician , Aramaic ) are available in the Faculty of Divinity , and are open to interested Arts students on a non-graduating basis . |
52 | Most of the conventions are open to non-Member States , and countries in all parts of the world are signatories of one or more conventions ; a notable addition was New Zealand which signed the Child Abduction convention in 1991 . |
53 | It is evident from this survey of English law on sexual assault that the parameters are open to considerable argument . |
54 | I am in no way decrying such methods — perhaps they work and perhaps they do not — but I do feel that they are open to considerable abuse . |
55 | Such courses are open to Biological Sciences students as well as to students of Agriculture and Ecological Science . |
56 | But the media carry a rich variety of messages which are open to different interpretations by a differentiated audience ( rather than a coherent class ) . |
57 | A number of additional sources of finance are open to overseas projects , in particular national or international development banks |
58 | That is to say , the wills of individual persons are open to public scrutiny and , in many cases , details are published in the newspapers . |
59 | After all , banks stand to lose far more if new rules are open to widespread abuse . |
60 | Yet Christianity is a religion that has always been open to rational criticism when its critics have been granted the freedom to make their challenge known . |