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Discover Ludwig"excite for" is not a correct or commonly used phrase in written English
A more appropriate way to express excitement in a sentence would be "excited for" or "excited about." Example: I am excited for my trip to Paris next week.
Exact(10)
For simplicity we assume that as a result of each excitation the entire region is heated to some constant temperature T excite for a duration Δt seconds.
Subversion may excite for a moment, but it will be crushed.
Not only does it rely on Excite for cable modem infrastructure, but it holds a 23percentt financial stake in it.
If Joe Kraus of Excite, for example, had contributed just $1,000 worth of stock to a senator right when the company went public in April 1996, three years later, even after some scary losses and plunges, that senator would have had $15,992 to spend on campaigning.
Two others, Sanwa Bank and Toyo Trust & Banking, are also talking about an alliance.See article: Japanese banks merge...Plugged in@Home, a provider of high-speed Internet access via cable, agreed to buy Excite for $6.7 billion, nearly double the recent market valuation of the busy Internet portal.
Cablevision claims it should have been in on the deal, and the suit is blocking AT&T from gaining majority control of Excite for now.
Similar(49)
Exciting for some.
I'm excited for him.
I'm excited for us".
"I'm excited for that.
We're excited for her".
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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