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"have features in common" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you are talking about two or more things that possess the same qualities or features. For example: "The two buildings had many features in common, such as their white columns and brick exteriors."
Exact(32)
All of these models have features in common, but they're constructed differently — and all of them leave some potentially important climate processes out entirely.
That it does have features in common with both birds and dinosaurs was a key part of the work that helped establish birds as dinosaurs.
There were poems that weren't good, and they tended to have features in common: a lack of control or occasion, a lack of linguistic felicity or surprise.
Western Slovak dialects are similar to Moravian and differ from the Central and the Eastern dialects, which have features in common with Polish and Ukrainian.
The Arab world refuses to acknowledge any good from this war, because many Arab regimes have features in common with Saddam's, and if getting rid of him was good, so would be getting rid of them.
Thus, despite the previous conventional wisdom that solvents affect the nervous system via non-selective breach of lipid membrane integrity, recent findings show that these agents have features in common with other major classes of addictive drugs.
Similar(28)
The comedy industry has features in common with film and music, but it also resembles the theatre industry – which also finds itself under-represented on those WHSmith shelves.
The attacks on 11 September 2001 were similar in both their ambition and intended impact to previous attacks undertaken by Osama bin laden and Al Qaeda, and also had features in common.
Ukrainian dialects are classified into Northern, Southeastern, Southwestern, and Carpathian groups (the last having features in common with Slovak); the literary language is based on the Kiev-Poltava dialect.
More recently, X-ray diffraction studies have shown that the three-dimensional structure of epistilbite's aluminosilicate framework has features in common with that of mordenite, which forms equant crystals.
In its command of complex spatial organization and the ballet lexicon, "Viscera" has features in common with the work of the British choreographer Christopher Wheeldon, who also began his choreographic career young.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com