Let $G$ be a at most countable discrete group acting freely on a standard probability measure space $X$ in a measure preserving way. It is well known that if $G$ is a finite group then this action admits a fundamental domain. Call a set $U\subset X$ an $(\varepsilon, N)$-fundamentalish domain iff there exist $N$ elements $g_1, \ldots, g_N$ of $G$ such that the sets $g_i(U)$ are pairwise disjoint and the measure of their union is at least $1-\varepsilon$. > **Question 1** If $G$ is an infinite group, $N_0$ is a natural number, $\varepsilon_0$ is a positive real number, does there exist an $(\varepsilon, N)$-fundamentalish domain with $\varepsilon<\varepsilon_0$ and $N>N_0$? > **Question 2** Same as above, but assume there is an element of infinite order in $G$. Question 2 boils down to $G=\mathbb Z$. I'm particularly interested in Bernoulli shifts. For example when the action is profinite and "transitive on each level", then clearly answer to Question 1 is positive: there exist $(0,N)$-fundamentalish domains for arbitrary large $N$.