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?
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: