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Discover LudwigThe phrase "anything in common" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to inquire whether two or more subjects share similarities or mutual interests.
Example: "Do you think we have anything in common that could help us work together more effectively?"
Alternatives: "any shared interests" or "any similarities".
Exact(57)
Did they have anything in common?
We never had anything in common.
We didn't have anything in common.
Do I have anything in common with John Ashcroft?
I hardly have anything in common with myself".
Have these films de femmes anything in common?
Do Rabbit and Frank have anything in common?
Do you have anything in common with Hamlet?
If these singers had anything in common, it was vividness.
I didn't think we'd have anything in common, but we really hit it off.
Similar(1)
Aside from being orange and vaguely oblong, do they have anything in common with their namesakes?
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