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Except

Except is a word used to indicate exclusion from a statement or group. It functions as a preposition, a conjunction, an adverb, and, in some contexts, a verb meaning to exclude. Its history traces to Latin excipere, meaning “to take out,” via Old French excepter. In many uses it contrasts what is included with what is not, and it commonly appears in phrases like “except for” or “with the exception of.”

As a preposition, except introduces the excluded item: All students except Maria passed. As a conjunction, it

Common constructions include “except for” and “with the exception of.” “Except” is preferred for concise writing,

links
clauses
with
the
sense
of
“with
the
exception
that”:
All
attended
except
that
one
arrived
late.
As
an
adverb,
it
qualifies
a
clause:
I
would
go,
except
I’m
busy.
The
verb
sense
is
chiefly
found
in
formal
or
legal
contexts:
authorities
may
say
that
a
rule
“excepts”
certain
cases.
while
“except
for”
slightly
broadens
the
excluded
element.
In
legal
and
financial
writing,
phrases
like
“except
as
provided
by
law”
are
common
to
set
explicit
exclusions.
In
everyday
language,
speakers
use
“except”
to
streamline
contrast
and
clarify
what
does
not
apply.