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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a hideout of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a place where someone or something is hiding, often in a secretive or concealed manner.
Example: "The detectives finally discovered a hideout of the notorious gang in the abandoned warehouse."
Alternatives: "a lair of" or "a refuge of".
Exact(6)
It sent $20.7 billion to neighboring Pakistan, a hideout of Al Qaeda, haven for the Taliban and breeding ground of insurgents, and yet an official ally made more crucial because of its nuclear arsenal.
The town is small — fifty thousand residents, without the college population factored in — and green and idyllic, a hideout of academic and historical reverence nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
A photograph of the same building shown in the activists' video was published on the Arabic Web site of Syria's state news agency, to illustrate a report that claimed the damage was done as the authorities "stormed a hideout of an armed terrorist group in one of the residential buildings in Mezze after evacuating the building".
On Thursday night, the Afghan Islamic Press quoted the Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, as saying that Taliban troops had raided a hideout of Mr. Karzai and his supporters, killing four anti-Taliban rebels and wounding several others.
They are wearing full body armor and their backs are to the camera as they survey the valley below, a hideout of Taliban insurgents and the scene of some of the fiercest fighting American troops had experienced in Afghanistan since the invasion in 2001.
This Asticle originally appeared on VICE US.
Similar(52)
Beni lies on the edge of the vast Virunga national park, used as a hideout for some of the dozens of militant groups active in North Kivu.
She is one of a handful of journalists travelling in and out of the Republic of Dagestan, whose mountains serve as a hideout for groups of local militants with ties to Islamic State.
Now it is more of a hideout for dear old aunts enjoying Sunday brunch.
(1935), a gangster picture that centred on a young couple (Edward Norris and Rochelle Hudson) who, during a rainstorm, take cover in an abandoned farmhouse, only to discover that it is a hideout for a group of kidnappers (with Cesar Romero playing their leader).
La Chinesca became a hideout for the hundreds of Chinese immigrants who fled from Sinaloa and Sonora seeking refuge in the basements of their fellow countrymen.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com