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The phrase "attach to things" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing the action of connecting or affixing something to various objects or items.
Example: "You can easily attach the label to things like boxes, bags, or any other items you want to identify."
Alternatives: "affix to objects" or "stick to items."
Exact(3)
[4] How names attach to things is a central question in linguistics and philosophy.
Words are labels that we attach to things, but the attempt to justify that practice merely repeats it: in using words, it presupposes precisely the justification that it aims to provide.
Simply writing a message and sticking it allows us to attach to things or places information to them immediately.
Similar(57)
"But she gets emotionally attached to things.
A person gets attached to things".
Surely words are more than convenient tags attached to things?
I don't get particularly attached to things, which is probably why I'm good at my job.
But this violates our belief — from John Stuart Mill and from common sense — that names are attached to things, to something in the world.
But some Itizen users have been employing the service to tell stories of object creation — a clothing designer, a bike messenger-bag maker and others are attaching to things the story of how they were made or by whom.
Akinti, borrowing American rhetoric, fails to acknowledge that calcified Britain allows an alternative route to racial acceptance precisely because of the importance attached to things like pronunciation and monogrammed cuffs.
"If you become attached to things," Ms. Campbell said, recalling his words, "then that starts driving your life and takes away your ability to use your mind and body and emotions in a healthy way".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com