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Find

Find is a verb meaning to locate something that is sought. It can also refer to the thing located, especially when the discovery is notable or valuable, in which case one might speak of a “find.” The standard past tense is found. In common usage, find can describe locating physical objects, information, people, or opportunities.

Etymologically, find derives from the Old English finna, meaning to come upon or discover. Related words exist

In formal contexts, find appears as a legal term: a court or jury may “find” a fact

In computing and digital contexts, the term appears in several specialized senses. The Unix and Unix-like find

In archaeology and cultural studies, a find refers to an object recovered during excavation, study, or survey,

in
other
Germanic
languages,
such
as
Dutch
vinden
and
German
finden,
reflecting
a
shared
ancestral
root.
The
term
has
long
been
used
in
everyday
language,
law,
science,
and
technology
to
denote
successful
locating
or
discovery.
or
liability,
producing
a
finding
or
findings
of
fact.
These
determinations
guide
judgments
and
may
be
subject
to
appeal
or
further
review.
command
searches
directory
trees
for
files
matching
specified
criteria.
In
spreadsheet
software,
the
FIND
function
returns
the
position
of
a
substring
within
a
string
and
is
typically
case-sensitive.
In
programming,
languages
offer
find-like
constructs,
such
as
JavaScript’s
Array.find,
which
returns
the
first
element
satisfying
a
predicate,
or
Pythonic
patterns
using
generators
to
locate
an
item.
Web
browsers
provide
a
“Find
in
page”
feature
(often
triggered
by
Ctrl+F)
to
locate
text
within
the
current
document.
often
cataloged
as
part
of
a
collection
or
archive.