the best thing to do is not try to look for it. it eventually turns up when you dont need it...
Do something that is fun to you.
Practical is the practice of something or the actual use of something. An experiment is a method used to find an answer to a hypothesis.
it is something that one find it hard to completely understand
Its saved so you can find it when you want to buy it.
A thermometer is used to find the temperature of something, being used in science or not.
One can find something about a lost cousin on the website lostcousins, where one can search for lost cousins fast and effectively using an online service.
you look around
In the middle of Nowhere....
You can say, "I've misplaced something," or "I've lost my item." If you want to specify what it is, you could say, "I've lost my keys," or "I can't find my wallet." Using phrases like "I can't locate" or "I can't seem to find" can also effectively convey that you've lost something.
I have got one word for you: LOOK. Try to retrace your steps. Think of clues to know if it's in your house. If you lost it at a theme park or something, I'm sorry but it's probably lost for good.
Well, you could trace your steps back to where you had the object you lost, Work backwards try this link: http://www.wikihow.com/Find-Lost-Objects
You look for it...
because someone have might in lost something and tried to find it that's why its called lost and found for this chapter
"Perdu" in French means lost or missing. It can also be used to describe something that is hidden or hard to find.
No such phobia, that I could find
did you find the macbook or something? I lost mine
It's another way of saying you're lost - as if you are out at sea where there are no landmarks to find your way. This can be physically lost or figuratively lost, as in you don't know something.