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The phrase "check a map" is correct and can be used in written English
You can use it when you want to encourage someone to use a map to look up information. For example: "If you're not sure where the nearest store is, check a map."
Exact(6)
The radio between him and his offices rarely went silent, and he often flipped on a small flashlight to check a map book with aerial photos of Beit Hanun on a detailed grid.
With an Internet-enabled smartphone, a customer might, for example, check for nearby restaurants using its built-in access to the Global Positioning System (GPS), check a map on the Web for directions to the restaurant, and then call for a reservation, all while en route.
If you pull out your device to take a photograph or check a map, you don't automatically have to also check your bank balance and your LinkedIn messages and the weather.
The first night we turn into a parking lot to check a map to locate some meadowlands... but look up to see a huge elk with massive antlers making his love-sick call while trailing after a demure girlie-elk.
Otherwise you could check a Map of The Stars for any addresses.
If you find map-reading makes you sick, ask the driver to pull over to check a map.
Similar(53)
"So I checked a map".
Checking a map on the computer mounted on his dashboard, Mr. Mauro located a garbage truck a block away, and within a few minutes its two-person crew had scooped the opossum into the compactor.
As soon as David J. Brenner heard about the undersea earthquake and subsequent tsunami that devastated northern Japan on March 11, he checked a map of the region's nuclear power plants.
Did she get a clitorectomy too?" A clitorectomy, for the uninitiated, is a barbaric process of female gential mutilation that takes place primarily in Africa, which, last time I checked a map, was not Chechnya.
While it is possible people in these situations might be spying on you, it is also possible that they're doing 101 innocent things like checking a map because they're lost, sulking after an argument with someone, testing out their new gear, etc. Look for repeated and suspicious activity, not one-offs.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com