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The phrase 'a guest for' is correct and usable in written English.
This phrase is typically used to introduce the person that someone is bringing along with them to an event. For example, "I'm bringing a guest for the dinner party."
Exact(60)
I like being a guest, for now.
Why is being a guest for 13 weeks an art piece?
After the War, Sale briefly played as a guest for Warrington, before returning to Leigh.
A hotel spokesman subsequently said that charging a guest for an unused safe would have been in error.
Update: Relatedly, CNN's "State of the Union" now says it declined Conway as a guest for Sunday's show.
He said he would make one final appearance as a guest, for a waltz with Ms. Rihanoff, this weekend.
Back down the tunnel, in front of the clubhouse, a guest for the occasion posed for a photo.
I was a guest for a one hour episode of WBUR talk show On Point with Tom Ashbrook.
Haaretz published the news alongside scholarly essays by Scholem and Buber; it serialized Agnon's novel "A Guest for the Night," in a hundred and thirty-nine installments.
The Canberra bureau chief for Sky News tweeted that he was a guest for a later show who had "snuck down" into the audience.
Last September a Canadian hotel sued a guest for $95,000 for writing a TripAdvisor review complaining about bed bugs in their room.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com