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Discover Ludwig"excess for" is not a grammatically correct phrase.
It is missing a verb or linking word to connect the words "excess" and "for." It could potentially be used in informal speech, but it would not be considered standard or proper in written English. A correct use of "excess for" in a sentence could be: "Her spending was excessive for our budget."
Exact(60)
This isn't excess for excess's sake.
His metabolism has slowed; he doesn't cram in the lively excess for its own sake.
Such excess, for Ramsay's many fans, is part of the deal.
There are too many signs of financial excess for anyone to relax.
Sunderland Magistrates Court imposed a £180 charge and £425 insurance excess for the officer's car.
The air above the stage is cluttered with decorative excess for the first three of the four acts.
It is worth paying the price of some excess for the general good of having a vigorous media.
This is likely to not only mean steeper premiums, but also a hefty excess for future subsidence claims.
So much in their palatial home is overwrought, as if to compensate by excess for impoverishments nonmaterial.
In fact, the more you look into this issue, the more you worry that we have entered a new era of excess for the military-industrial complex.
He is also a recovering alcoholic who hasn't drunk in excess for more than a decade, although he still sips and spits at tastings.
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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