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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a place to avoid" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a location that is undesirable or should be steered clear of for various reasons.
Example: "After hearing about the recent incidents, I would consider that neighborhood a place to avoid."
Alternatives: "a location to steer clear of" or "a site to bypass".
Exact(23)
In the best of circumstances, a levee in midsummer is a place to avoid.
A hole in the ground called Hells Canyon sounded like a place to avoid.
A couple of years later, when Weinberg's classmates started beating up Jewish students, home became a place to avoid.
While some people swim in the river, many Iraqi citizens still view it as a place to avoid.
Not long ago, Main Street was a place to avoid, a skateboarder's paradise with little but concrete sidewalks and ratty parking lots.
While she had come to think of her apartment as a place to decompress after work, it sometimes became a place to avoid.
Similar(37)
That would provide the credulous in the West a safe place to avoid a hard decision; and, if America goes along too, effectively turn the matter over to the Israelis.
And do not punk out, as one friend of mine tried to do, by staging the event in a public place to avoid a scene.
I like to sail to a private place to avoid the madness.
Hiding underground is a good place to avoid nuclear fallout, but let's not see any hiding underground to avoid political fallout, please.
The authorities have identified the Cuban Mission on Lexington Avenue as a particular place to avoid for those who do not like their toes stomped or the contents of their handbags thoroughly scrutinized.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com