Example sentences of "[art] right of [noun] to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A year earlier , at Erfurt , Napoleon had agreed with the tsar to accept the right of Russia to Wallachia and Moldavia , but to leave Serbia within the Ottoman empire .
2 Part of the refugee problem will be solved by granting them the right of return to Palestine ( i.e. the West Bank and Gaza Strip ) or to the Jordanian-Palestinian federation . ’
3 Article 42 went on to give an almost supplementary right to the state in providing for a child 's education by acknowledging the right of parents to school their children in their own home should they wish it .
4 And the Welsh international keeper was to deny Middlesbrough again in the 88th minute when Gittens rose high to the right of goal to power in a close-range , angled header which Norman kept out with one hand .
5 Equality of access must be promoted in all forms of work with the right not to take part in some roles as strongly guarded as the right of access to others .
6 Users ' freedom to browse in a library collection has not only been desirable but would also appear to be linked with the right of access to information itself .
7 Over the next two years the powers of the papacy were gradually whittled away by successive parliamentary statutes ; all papal financial exactions were withheld ; papal dispensations were invalidated ; and papal consecration of bishops and the right of appeal to Rome were both declared unnecessary .
8 On Aug. 9 over 90 per cent of the delegates voted in favour of recognizing the right of Quebec to self-determination .
9 In the interest of fairness and the protection of fellow reviewers , I must be allowed the right of reply to Martin Collins ' extraordinary outburst ( Mail , Sept ) in response to my review of his book Classic Walks in the Peak District .
10 You have the right of reply to Mr 's counter motion .
11 International markets , the EC and the New European Economic Area in particular , are seen by many as key expansion areas , and Society efforts to remove regulations restricting the rights of solicitors to practice abroad continued .
12 The rights of presentation to livings in the Church of England , known as advowsons , which are often in the hands of laymen , are also regarded as interests in land .
13 It is suggested that views diverge on the central question of the rights of parents to custody and control of their children in relation to the right of the state ( acting through courts and social work agencies ) to intervene in the parent-child relationship , to remove children from their parents , to allocate their care and control to other parties , and to determine their subsequent upbringing .
14 The Social Charter , which had been adopted by 11 member countries in December 1989 [ see p. 37132 ] , continued to draw much criticism from the UK during this period , particularly with regard to the rights of employees to consultation in the workplace .
15 A second objection is that it still has not taken the point seriously enough about the rights of pupils to autonomy and freedom in reflectiveness and choice of commitment .
16 Furthermore , the rights of pupils to autonomy and self-responsibility are still not adequately protected under the new form of confessionalism .
17 When the ideas of the French Revolution concerning the rights of nations to self-government reached the Slovenes , they already had many of the attributes of a modern nation , but it was to take them over a century to achieve a form of self-determination within the wider Yugoslav state .
18 As with so many of these police powers which impinge on the rights of protesters to freedom of speech and assembly the high quality of police understanding and reasonableness is crucial to success .
19 Hearing society , however , has not taken up this responsibility nor seen that all society 's members have a right of access to society 's knowledge .
20 In 1984 the NUT reported ‘ considerations of natural justice which led the union to adopt a policy opposed to confidential reports and references on teachers apply equally to the current demand from many parents for a right of access to files kept on their children ’ .
21 If the Timex worker wants to regard that as a right of reply to Neil 's speech , so be it .
22 Equally , Mrs Smith argued , the common law would have had no difficulty in affording a right of action to parents in a case such as the present one .
23 Despite engaging in extended negotiations lasting two years , Henry 's representatives failed to persuade the pope that the case should be heard by Wolsey in England , with no right of appeal to Rome against the verdict .
24 Held , dismissing the appeal , that notwithstanding the wording of section 8(2) of the Finance Act 1986 W. Plc. was not a member of the self-regulating organisation Lautro for the purposes of the Act and had no right of appeal to Lautro under the provisions of Lautro 's 1988 Rules ; that Lautro had a duty to act fairly not only to its members but , in appropriate circumstances , to those appointed representatives on which , in accordance with its rules , an intervention notice was to be served ; but that , in determining whether those affected by an intervention notice should be permitted to make representations before the notice was served , Lautro had to balance their interests against the interests of investors pending a full inquiry ; and that , having decided to serve the notice as a matter of urgency , Lautro should not be burdened with the necessity to decide whether time permitted it to receive representations before it served the notice ( post , pp. 575C–G , 576A–C , 577C–D , 579E — 580A , D — 581B , 582E ) .
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