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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a site at" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a specific location or webpage, often in the context of discussing online resources or physical locations.
Example: "You can find more information about the project on a site at www.example.com."
Alternatives: "a location at" or "a webpage at".
Exact(60)
Some services will post a site at no cost.
SCHOOL VIOLENCE: www.report -it.com -- A site at which students can report threats of violence at schools.
The Space Tourism Society, founded in 1995, has a site at www.space-tourism-society.org.org
The contract involved a site at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory.
The United States Department of Agriculture has a site at www.aphis.usda.gov.usda.gov
Ten years later a site at Henoko, adjacent to Camp Schwab (see map), was formally selected.
It considers the historical geography of a site at the geopolitical axis of the British Empire and the Cold War.
The plans come as the Museum of London continues its £250m relocation to a site at nearby Smithfield market.
The domain was bought by Allwall.com, an online poster vendor that continues to operate a site at that Web address.
In targeting a site at the epicentre of elite consumerism in the upscale neighborhood of Westlands, they galvanised worldwide attention.
(Anne Braggins, a Briton who heads the International Orienteering Federation's Trail-O Committee, hasitesite at dialspace.dial.pipex.com/vision/trailo.pipex.com/vision/trailo
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com