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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a man everything" is not correct and does not make sense in written English.
It seems to be an incomplete thought or a misphrasing, and it cannot be used in any context without additional information.
Example: "He is a man who has everything he could ever want."
Alternatives: "a man who has it all" or "a man with everything."
Exact(3)
Rogen is a bespectacled bear of a man; everything about him is brown – glasses, jumper, eyes, beard – making him even more ursine.
Her hero is Nick, a peasant boy who is forced to toil for Sir Nestor the Nasty, who is a man everything his name promises: cruel, vain, lazy and so ugly that babies cry when they see him.
If The Bridge's Norén had been played by a man, everything would have changed: the moment when she walks up to a stranger in a bar, for instance, asking if he wants sex, would not give us the same frisson of discomfort and delight.
Similar(57)
"He was a good-looking sporty guy, a man's man, everything a footballer should be".
We had no music in a sense, man, everything was chaos, but we just jammed.
He was a shabbily dressed man, everything he wore having been abandoned by someone else.
For man, everything has a beginning and an end.
Must a man do everything?
But that day, he was a man leaving everything he had on the stage.
He also said, "When a man loses everything, he's capable of anything".
Hamilton described the character as "a passively resisting man, a man above everything who just wants to be left alone".
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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