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The phrase "a rope for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a rope intended for a specific purpose or use.
Example: "He brought a rope for climbing the steep cliffs during the hike."
Alternatives: "a cord for" or "a line for".
Exact(26)
We are making a rope for you".
The method employed by the Egyptians earned them the name "rope pullers" in Greece, apparently because they employed a rope for laying out their construction guidelines.
Mr. Samberg falls down, or collides with a blunt object (a washing machine suspended from a tree by a rope, for instance), or utters lame, self-conscious catchphrases.
In Manillaköysi (1957; The Manila Rope), the main character deserts, taking with him a rope for which he is willing to risk his life, though he has no use for the rope.
When they need to cross a river that is too deep to ford safely, some orangutans bend saplings into bridges and twist several tree-anchored vines into a rope for extra support.
Six months later, he was free-soloing a cliff in Cornas when, he wrote, an instructor asked if he could help secure a rope for a pair of students.
Similar(33)
A thick filament or wire is stiffer than a fine one of the same material; its use results in a stiffer rope for a given size.
Bowline, knot forming a loop at the end of a rope, used for mooring boats, hoisting, hauling, and fastening one rope to another.
One long loop is both a giant hairpin and a rope ready for coiling into who knows what.
The elevator door opened on the third floor — and my escorts and I faced a throng of journalists waiting behind a rope barrier for Miller's arrival.
In this not all ropes are made alike: A rope made for rock climbing will not hold up to the strain of ice climbing.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com