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Discover Ludwig"make exemptions" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase to refer to allowing someone or something to be excluded from a requirement or rule, or to the act of granting someone or something such an exemption. For example, "The company decided to make exemptions for employees with more than five years of service."
Exact(15)
It would allow the city manager to make exemptions to those who cannot find other products to use and exempts the polystyrene coolers that residents and visitors often take to the beach.
Mr. Cuomo's budget, which the Legislature must approve, would make exemptions for many major statewide contracts.
Ministers are also likely to face a need to make exemptions for the unintentionally homeless, and for asylum seekers.
Sweden won leeway for even more flexibility to make exemptions to certain classes of creditors in exchange for other commitments.
For those uninitiated in the country's tax codes (lucky you!), most states tax all "tangible personal property" but make exemptions for select "necessities" (non-luxury items).
Labour sources said the party would urge the government to make exemptions for people with disabilities and carers in setting the welfare cap and urge the Conservatives not to go ahead with cuts in the value of employment support allowance.
Similar(45)
Aaron B. McLear, a spokesman for Mr. Schwarzenegger, said: "The governor has not made exemptions to the furlough order because he believes that the state government needs to cut back, just as every California family and business is doing.
In a few days, the French Parliament is to vote on legislation to ban full-face coverings in public places, making exemptions for carnival masks or Santa Claus beards, but not for the niqab full-face veil or the full-length burqa that is used by only a fraction of women in France's Muslim population of five million, Europe's largest.
They argue that EU law makes exemptions for "basic scientific research", a category which, according to legal advice obtained by the Erasmus Medical Centre, covers the manuscript.If Dr Fouchier were denied the permit yet chose to defy the decision then he would, if convicted, face a maximum penalty of six years in prison.
Making exemptions easier is not the only path forward.
The bill, though, does instruct the Library of Congress to consider making exemptions for those devices when it reviews exemptions again next year. .
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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