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Discover Ludwig"got lost there" is correct and usable in written English.
It is often used when talking about getting lost somewhere, either literally or figuratively. For example: "I got lost there and had to ask for directions."
Exact(9)
"I got lost there the first time I went in," one resident recalled.
But then I was in Harare with them last week and they got lost there, so what can I expect.
Gunther, a lifelong New Yorker, became enchanted with Newark when he got lost there on his way to the airport.
Having memorised Terry Wogan's piece in the Sunday Times, you close with the following monologue: "I know Sandymount Strand: I got lost there once.
When the poet falls in love with Emma (Theresa McCarthy), a beautiful young woman who has lived in the store since she got lost there at the age of 6, she persuades him to help her escape to the outside world.
Get ready though, cos some Brits appear to be out on the lake at Shunyi... 8.43am: OK, something got lost there in the transition in personnel, but it seems that Britain finished fifth in the lake which, ordinarily, is never good enough to qualify.
Similar(51)
You can get lost there.
You'll get lost there".
I don't think we would get lost there now.
And the best way to see Georgetown is to get lost there.
(Sometimes they're good in a stew, but usually they get lost there).
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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