Exclusive means expensive and perhaps hard to get into. Exclusive to means that something is unique, and holds a special property. In your first example either sounds strange.
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Hi, i'd like to know whether inclusive can be placed after between a and b, as after from march to july to indicate a and b are included in the range. I've never heard this idea expressed exactly this way before. Hi there, if i say 'allow me to introduce our distinguished guests or honored guests', is there any difference?
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And flow isn't exclusive to artists and athletes.
Your restaurant serves only breakfast. Is it an oblique object? Because i would say that it completes the meaning of. The bitten apple logo is exclusive to apple computers.
I think the logical substitute would be one or one or the other: