It should be
You cannot let the enemy find you.
No. Let means that the statement is a command, but "the police cannot find you" is a positive sentence in itself and not a command.
I play the guitar and find some people I can play with.
I cannot find my suglasses anywhere; I must have mislaid them
Where did you leave the car keys? I cannot find them anywhere.
Where did you leave the car keys? I cannot find them anywhere.
The proper grammatical past tense of find out is "found out." "I didn't need to use the internet to help me with my homework as I already found out the answer in my textbook earlier this afternoon" is a proper way to use found out in a sentence with past tense.
find now
find now
The proper grammatical past tense of find out is "found out." "I didn't need to use the internet to help me with my homework as I already found out the answer in my textbook earlier this afternoon" is a proper way to use found out in a sentence with past tense.
The enemy was hard to find in the jungles of South Vietnam. The answer is jungles.
No. Instead say, "Please see the attached report" or "The report is attached". "Attache" is not the proper form in English for a past participle, the grammatical entity needed in these sentence.
The sentence "Is this a place where I can find landscaping rock?" is a complex sentence. It contains an independent clause ("Is this a place") and a dependent clause ("where I can find landscaping rock"). The dependent clause cannot stand alone as a complete thought, which is a key characteristic of complex sentences.