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Discover Ludwig"exempt for" is not a correct phrase.
The correct phrase would be "exempt from." This phrase is generally used to indicate that something or someone is free from an obligation or restriction. Here is an example sentence using "exempt from": "I am exempt from paying income tax this year because I am a student."
Exact(56)
Neumann's exemption brings the total number of players exempt for the 2001 Open to 63.
To his dismay, he was initially told the only way he might be exempt for 2012 would be to use one of his career money-list exemptions.
European Union citizens are exempt, for example.
He lived in Brooklyn, exempt for summers in Friendship.
He would extend the business tax to insurance companies, currently exempt for no good reason.
More than 900 models of guns would be exempt for hunting and sporting.
The top 125 on the money list are fully exempt for 2003.
Similar(4)
She said this was a non-controversial statement that had "overwhelming" support in Congress, but that no one thought it would be used to exempt for-profit corporations from complying with laws governing the workplace.
The interest on pension obligation bonds is not tax-exempt for this reason.
And the company cannot escape capital gains tax on asset sales until it has been tax-exempt for 10 years.
Some munis are not tax-exempt for A.M.T. purposes, so they pay a higher interest rate, but if a taxpayer is subject to the A.M.T., he should avoid those issues.
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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