0 to give someone the right to do or have something -- 給予權利;使符合資格
[ + to infinitive ] The employer is entitled to ask for references. 僱主有權索取推薦信。
Being unemployed entitles you to free medical treatment. 失業時,你有權享受免費醫療。
Also, as a general rule, their status as part of the political leadership did not entitle them to special privileges.
The government is entitled to know what its members are doing.
Theories of equal treatment will differ in their specification of what makes persons "similarly situated" and of what "similarly situated" persons are entitled to.
Perhaps, in other words, individuals are entitled to (roughly) settle for having a good will, and beyond that let chips fall where they may.
The court was perfectly entitled to award only a reliance measure of damage or to find specific items of harm unproven.
Thorp looked at fifty dances not entitled 'pastoral' but which used shepherds and shepherdesses: of these thirty-eight were for benefit nights.
There were at least sixty-two performances from this period entitled 'pastoral', and they used all possible combinations of dancers.
When passengers take their seats, they are entitled to occupy as against the carrier and subsequent passengers.