0 past simple and past participle of access --
1 to be able to get to or get inside a place: --
Students need a card to access restricted areas such as residences and labs.
It is too difficult for anyone using a wheelchair to access the building.
2 to be able to use or obtain something such as a service: --
It needs to be easier for small businesses to access government resources and advice.
Older people may have difficulty accessing medical services.
3 to open a computer file (= a collection of stored information), a website, etc. in order to look at or change information in it: --
In the judgments of grammaticality the internalised linguistic knowledge will be accessed in a much higher degree.
Follow-up clinics that can be accessed when patients or carers choose to are worth piloting and evaluating.
Mapping could provide a common layer from which several ontologies could be accessed and hence could exchange information in semantically sound manners.
Information on how and when such resources are accessed is necessary to design tenure regimes that do not limit mobility but do increase tenure security.
Because these do not match the representation that he has accessed during production, the speaker will realize his error and (normally) attempt to correct himself.
The latter program violates the restriction specified by such that x1 and x2 must be accessed in this order.
No memory is allocated for width and height, as their values are computed each time they are accessed.
In some countries, filters imposed by the government block sites, so that search engine results for controversial topics yield sites that cannot be accessed.