Bedeutung
To discover the location of a specific place.
Kultureller Hintergrund
Finding a place to live in major cities like NYC or SF is considered a major life challenge and a common topic of conversation. The phrase 'finding your place' can also refer to understanding the complex social class system, though this is becoming less common. In the age of social media, 'finding a place' often refers to finding an 'Instagrammable' location for photos. For digital nomads, 'finding a place' means finding a location with strong Wi-Fi and good coffee.
Use 'to + verb'
Always follow 'find a place' with 'to' and an action to sound natural (e.g., 'find a place to sleep').
Don't forget the 'A'
Saying 'I need find place' is a common error. Always include the article 'a'.
Bedeutung
To discover the location of a specific place.
Use 'to + verb'
Always follow 'find a place' with 'to' and an action to sound natural (e.g., 'find a place to sleep').
Don't forget the 'A'
Saying 'I need find place' is a common error. Always include the article 'a'.
Spot vs. Place
Use 'spot' for something small (parking, a chair) and 'place' for something larger (house, city).
Teste dich selbst
Fill in the missing word to complete the phrase.
We need to find a ______ to stay for the night.
When looking for accommodation like a hotel, we use the word 'place'.
Choose the correct past tense form.
Yesterday, I ______ a great place for coffee.
'Found' is the irregular past tense of 'find'.
Complete the dialogue.
A: This restaurant is full! B: Don't worry, let's ______.
Since they are at a restaurant, they are looking for food.
Match the phrase to the situation.
Match 'Find a place to park' with the correct context.
You park a car, so this is the correct context.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Visuelle Lernhilfen
Types of Places You Can Find
Accommodation
- • Apartment
- • Hotel
- • Hostel
Social
- • Cafe
- • Restaurant
- • Park
Utility
- • Parking spot
- • Power outlet
- • ATM
Aufgabensammlung
4 AufgabenWe need to find a ______ to stay for the night.
When looking for accommodation like a hotel, we use the word 'place'.
Yesterday, I ______ a great place for coffee.
'Found' is the irregular past tense of 'find'.
A: This restaurant is full! B: Don't worry, let's ______.
Since they are at a restaurant, they are looking for food.
Match 'Find a place to park' with the correct context.
You park a car, so this is the correct context.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Häufig gestellte Fragen
10 FragenYes, but 'find a place' is more common when you are still searching or talking about the process of renting.
No, it can be for a seat, a restaurant, a parking spot, or even a location on a map.
'A place' is any location. 'The place' is a specific one you already talked about.
Use 'to' before a verb (to eat) and 'for' before a noun (for the party).
Yes, it is perfectly professional to say 'We need to find a place for the conference.'
You can say 'find a spot' or 'grab a place'.
Yes, 'I found a place' is one of the most common ways to announce you have moved or finished a search.
No, it can mean a park, a city, or even a metaphorical position in a group.
That is a separate idiom meaning a very popular or fashionable location.
Yes, this usually means finding where you belong or finding your page in a book.
Verwandte Redewendungen
Find a spot
similarTo find a small, specific location.
Take place
builds onTo happen or occur.
In place
relatedIn the correct position.
Lose your place
contrastTo forget where you were (e.g., in a book).