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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a random spot" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to an unspecified or arbitrary location.
Example: "We decided to have a picnic at a random spot in the park, away from the crowds."
Alternatives: "an arbitrary location" or "a chance location".
Exact(41)
We had stopped at a random spot on an unmarked road.
Now Mr. O'Malia wants to go further, saying the agency should create a "random spot check".
She might spin a globe, place her finger on a random spot, and decide to move there.
A classical computer might start at a random spot on the surface and look around for a lower spot to explore until it cannot walk downhill anymore.
If your eyes were sensitive to them, then once every few days you would be dazzled by a burst of radiation from a random spot in the sky.
Here's how it works: you're "dropped off" at a random spot within the Street View universe, with no hints about your location but what Google's cameras have captured.
Similar(19)
Eighty-five healthy men recruited to the study provided a single plasma sample and a random spot-urine sample.
The albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR) was measured in a sterile, random, spot urine sample confirmed by a timed urinary collection (4 or 24 h).
Later this fall, we will embark on a research vessel toward an otherwise random spot in the north Pacific Ocean called Station P, more than 1,000 miles offshore.
Eventually, at a seemingly random spot on the side of the road, Janek instructed me to pull over.
A sterile, random spot urine sample was used to measure albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR).
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