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The phrase "a reverence for a" is not correct as it is incomplete and lacks context.
It could be used in a sentence that discusses respect or admiration for something, but it needs to be followed by a specific noun.
Example: "She has a reverence for a great many traditions that have shaped her culture."
Alternatives: "a respect for" or "an admiration for".
Exact(2)
"What we're seeing is a reverence for a living, breathing organism," he said.
And so — with a reverence for a childhood memory and the hope that I might revisit my past — I set out for the Upper East Side to see it: a piece of lost childhood in the form of an enormous Tudor bed.
Similar(54)
The prophet Zarathushtra insisted on a reverence for all elements.
They feel a reverence for nature — and also an entitlement.
Is it Britain, which shares a common language and a reverence for ancient collegiate campuses?
To these jobs he brought a decidedly dorky passion: a reverence for restraint and efficacy.
You could also make a case that a reverence for know-how is a peculiarly American trait.
None of this was rooted in a reverence for the principle of a free press.
Like TTD, DFF demonstrates a reverence for pork and offal and an affinity for seasonal ingredients.
Showing a reverence for understatement, Anderson said: "A lot of those words you used to describe Republicans are negative.
It has an ethereal quality, a reverence for poetics, a dreamy wishfulness that makes me wonder how it will play onstage.
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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