Example sentences of "[vb pp] access to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | It is also in part a result of the demands of modern life which have made access to ordered information more and more necessary . |
2 | Rubino , attempting to show that his client was the victim of a political vendetta by the Bush administration , had sought access to classified government documents , to obtain evidence that the US administration had maintained a formal or covert relationship with Noriega . |
3 | Anyone who has had access to classified work produced by the scientific civil service is likely to endorse this view . |
4 | The author , investigative journalist David Leigh , has had access to unpublished trial records and secret Whitehall files , and says that ‘ Ministers have been getting away with murder . |
5 | The Department of Employment 's survey of women who were of working age in 1980 ( Martin and Roberts , 1984 ) presents much evidence to explain why most women do not complete lengthy periods of pensionable service and why , where they have had access to occupational pension benefits , they tend to end up with lower weekly rates of pension and smaller lump sums than their male contemporaries . |
6 | He also ruled that Noriega 's lawyers must obtain the court 's approval before being given access to classified government documents connected with the case . |
7 | With the agreement of patients , the CAB workers will be allowed access to basic information , such as patients ' legal status , doctor , ward and welfare benefits . |
8 | During their isolation , they are reportedly denied access to legal counsel and family visits and are at risk of systematic torture and ill-treatment . |
9 | That it is firmly tied must be correct ; the inhabitants of Brave New World are not autonomous precisely because they are denied access to relevant information . |
10 | Henceforth they were denied access to active participation in the public cult and ( by implication of the biblical text which concentrated upon male activity ) deemed exempt from the obligation to fulfil many of the commandments — a loaded exemption given the fact that Judaism by this time was already very much a religion of performance , moving towards being a religion dominated by a plethora of commandments governing virtually every aspect of daily existence . |