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"share a common root" is a valid sentence in written English.
You can use it to express the idea that two things are related in some way, due to their shared origin. For example, "English and French both share a common root, so they have a lot of words in common."
Exact(10)
Flamenco and Indian music share a common root — Gypsies are said to have their origins in the exodus of members of the "untouchables" from the Punjab, centuries ago — and the sitar player Anoushka Shankar's latest release, "Traveller," explores the connection.
From breaking the internal and external roadblocks to creative thinking, and unlocking the black box of making new ideas, to finding that extraordinary needle in the proverbial haystack of ordinariness all these tricks and tactics share a common root and collectively, they form a powerful creativity platform relentlessly used by such fakers as Picasso and Shakespeare.
Even if humanity does share a common root (what he calls, adapting an expression from Goethe, an "ur-culture" of multiple possibilities), the development of its branches and leaves is a matter of diversification, not homogenization.
All or some stems in a cluster may share a common root.
Regardless of their doctors' intentions, Jodie and Mary H.'s situations share a common root issue, which likely contributes to suspicions and fears surrounding the husband stitch: The fact that people often do not feel in control of or adequately informed about what's happening to their bodies when giving birth.
In addition, proteins with a 7TM domain but do not share a common root with classes A, B, C, or F nGPCRs were excluded from analysis.
Similar(50)
In other words, Kim's hunch about her two diseases sharing a common root could well have been wrong.
By sharing a common root, the meaning of sanity and healthy are bound by a strong relationship.
These three lineages share a common ancestor near the root of the Eumurinae (Murinae, excluding the Philippine cloud rats Phloeomys and Batomys; [36]) and are not closely related within the Murinae (Fig. 1, Node A).
In the first case the stems have a common root and thus share a common semantic field, as with the English verbs write, wrote, and written.
"But we do share a common ancestor".
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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