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'waste on' is not a correct phrase in written English
If you are trying to express the idea of wasting something, you can use the phrase "waste on (something)" or "waste (something) on (something)". For example, "Don't waste money on unnecessary luxuries."
Exact(59)
How many thanks must we waste on one another, Brendan P.S.
"Air travel's too expensive to waste on your wife," sneers one, in front of her.
Who had time to waste on shopping?
"It's waste on top of waste on top of waste," he said.
It is a self-destructive waste on an epic scale.
I don't have time to waste on a French fling".
There was no time to waste on artistic vanity.
He added: "This is a minor waste on my time.
Sympathy is too scarce to waste on strangers, he explained.
There is no time to waste on plans that can't succeed.
Too often in return the public got shoddy science and waste on a monumental scale.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com