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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a play for a" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used when referring to a theatrical performance intended for a specific audience or purpose.
Example: "The theater company is producing a play for a young audience to inspire creativity and imagination."
Alternatives: "a performance for a" or "a production aimed at a".
Exact(47)
But it wasn't a play for a shot.
I'd love to do a play for a different feel.
EASYJET is making a play for a larger slice of the business-travel market.
"I think a lot of people are going to make a play for a channel," Ms. Norman said.
GERALD GUTIERREZ Brooklyn The writer won the 1996 Tony Award for best director of a play for "A Delicate Balance".
It's a test case all around -- for a company, for a play, for a theater, for a county.
Similar(11)
Federico Garcia Lorca wrote "The House of Bernarda Alba," a play for an all-female cast, two months before he was shot by one of Francisco Franco's firing squads in 1936.
"I am doing a play for $300 a week".
So Purdue ran a play for Hummel, a senior who had 26 points.
The soul will find a theatre, a play, for dancing with its questions.
People assemble for a specific play, for a very limited time, three to four weeks.
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