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when it comes to finding vs when it comes to find

The correct phrase is 'when it comes to finding.' The structure 'when it comes to + gerund (finding)' is commonly used in English to introduce a topic or subject.

Last updated: March 24, 2024 • 1317 views

when it comes to finding

This phrase is correct and commonly used in English.

This phrase is used to introduce a topic or subject, indicating that the following action is related to that topic.

Examples:

  • When it comes to finding a solution, creativity is key.
  • When it comes to finding the right words, she is very articulate.
  • When it comes to finding a job, networking is essential.
  • When it comes to finding happiness, it's important to focus on the present.
  • When it comes to finding a good restaurant, ask the locals for recommendations.
  • And when it comes to finding murderers, that's wrong.
  • Climate change is a fact which becomes interesting to discuss when it comes to finding answers.
  • It is increasingly important when it comes to finding the right financial incentive so that the pharmaceutical industries take a greater interest in paediatric medicinal products.
  • The latter encounter a number of difficulties in settling in European host countries, particularly when it comes to finding work, given that they are the primary victims of unemployment and de facto discrimination at the workplace, principally with regard to social security entitlements.
  • Because when it comes to finding a good old lady you don't get what you want, Rat.
  • It is a key part of the puzzle when it comes to finding a long-term solution to the conflicts in the region and also in the implementation of resolution 1701 in full.
  • When it comes to finding a mate, there's always someone else who's better at it.
  • Apathy on the part of certain public authorities at all levels, community, national, regional or local has been detected all too often when it comes to finding fair solutions to the problems arising.
  • But mass isn't everything when it comes to finding out just how big the biggest stars can be.
  • Not when it comes to finding my wife.
  • This professional uncertainty has consequences when it comes to finding good teachers of religious education in all languages.
  • As has already been said today, 'safety first' must, in future, be the guiding concept when it comes to finding a solution.
  • Russia is potentially a very important partner for the European Union, for example, when it comes to finding a solution to certain frozen conflicts in Europe which remain unresolved.
  • Given this humanitarian, social, economic and political interest we must all have a broad view when it comes to finding the funds needed, while recognising the existing difficulties.
  • I would come back to what the Commissioner was saying: Europe is now more than ever at a crossroads when it comes to finding new paths and preventing a repeat of past mistakes, something that would prove absolutely tragic.
  • He only circles white people and I've told him, when it comes to finding you a husband, we can't afford to be (racist.)
  • You know my problems with the FBI, but when it comes to finding killers, you want these people on your side.
  • I would like to use my speech to express my satisfaction with regard to the way in which the European Union is proving, at the moment, to be the main actor when it comes to finding viable solutions in the combat against climate change.
  • The imagination of computer designers appears limitless when it comes to finding new opportunities.
  • It is perhaps no accident that it is precisely in Sweden, which has far and away the heaviest burden of taxation in the EU, that imaginations are running riot when it comes to finding new forms of income from taxation.

when it comes to find

This phrase is incorrect in English. The verb 'find' should be in the gerund form 'finding' after 'when it comes to.'

  • And he hasn't come to find me.
  • You leave word where to find you when it comes to that.
  • Come to find there's a softening agent mixed in with the plastic.
  • Some talk you've come to find out...
  • It's where insufferable people come to find obscure music no one likes.
  • It is always there when I come to find.
  • You have come to find Veronica Vogler.
  • He, this one come to find the gold.
  • Then an ambulance from the local hospital, will come to find the shark.
  • [Laughing] Someday I may come to find you.
  • Come to find his mother... was your secretary way back in the day.
  • Come to find out, these all got recorded as misdemeanors.
  • You've come to find your car keys.
  • Come to find out the taillight wasn't blown.
  • I've come to find the great sorceress Fin Raziel.
  • She must have come to find me.
  • Come to find out everybody loves you.
  • Come to find out that what I thought was a boil on my neck was actually a carbuncle.
  • I've come to find out Mama aims to sell it.
  • Come to find, I can't even get access to it.

Alternatives:

  • when it comes to finding

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