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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a map to find" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a map that helps someone locate or discover something specific.
Example: "I need a map to find the hidden treasure in the forest."
Alternatives: "a guide to locate" or "a chart to discover".
Exact(30)
We had to look on a map to find it".
Neither should need a map to find their way around campus.
People use a map to find their way, and they need to find their way whenever they are lost.
Users can zoom in and out on a map to find geographically relevant information about infectious disease outbreaks.
But you don't need a map to find this island, because its mythology is built around that very real, most easily found (and lost) of places – love.
They were hidden so deeply in the enormous ships that for one shipment, the undercover investigator needed a map to find them, Mr. Hynes said.
Similar(30)
Those interested in a particular destination may click on a world map to find out more about adventure opportunities in or around the region.
I preferred a chocolate adventure with so many slopes and swirls in the landscape around a butte-like molten cake that I needed a road map to find my way back out of it.
We attended a rather small church that sat on the back side of a farm to market road that you would need a physical map to find.
Or if you used a paper map to find your way here?
With that information, he used a microfilmed map to find the number of the census district where Joseph and his household had been counted.
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