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Since the late 1800s, the phrase "contains exclusively" has been consistently used more often than "exclusively contains". Ngram viewer: "contains exclusively" vs "exclusively contains".

What is the difference, if any?

Daze
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    Exclusively means to the exclusion of others, so if we say that something 'contains exclusively (only)' a particular type of ingredient, it seems to me that exclusively describes the range of ingredients, not the way they are contained. In other words, exclusively contains doesn't make sense. – Kate Bunting Dec 06 '19 at 09:07
  • Positioning of adverbs is a complex matter, and depends on various factors including identifying the function of the adverb, and other factors around type of verb, general structure, readability, ambiguity, etc; with an abverb like "exclusively" whose category is less obvious, it's tricky. Here are questions from ELU and ELL SEs. https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/9702/should-an-adverb-go-before-or-after-a-verb https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/8870/where-is-the-correct-place-to-place-adverbs-in-sentences – Stuart F Dec 06 '19 at 11:52

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