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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'adore for' is not grammatically correct.
The correct phrase would be 'adore (something or someone)'. Example sentence: I adore my grandmother's cooking.
Exact(6)
"Say it's me that you adore, for now and evermore," Ms. Adams sang.
It's a film I adore for lots of reasons – but especially the way it evokes a sense of place.
Think about it: hundreds of liberal Jews in Palm Beach, some of them elderly retirees, mistakenly vote for Pat Buchanan, a candidate they revile for both his politics and his comments about Hitler, and this costs Al Gore, a candidate they adore for picking a Jewish running mate, four years in the White House?
Top spots Piccadilly Circus (which students adore for its musty, dated bookshops) and Leicester Square draw students with their booming clubs, and promoters are usually littered around Leicester Square on weekends, handing out flyers for discounted entry.
It's heavy and it's dark, and it's another one of those difficult stories I adore for its inability to leave the reader unscathed.
A fashion icon is a person that people admire and adore for outfits and looks.
Similar(52)
Throughout East and Central Europe she came to be adored for her high principles and plain-speaking.
Like Marilyn, Cheryl comes from a troubled background and is all the more adored for it.
Marant is the insiders' label of the moment, adored for her cool tailoring.
David Cornwell's father, Ronnie Cornwell, was an ebullient criminal and a seductive charmer, whom David adored for decades — and finally loathed.
The child Krishna was adored for his mischievous pranks; he also performed many miracles and slew demons.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com