Bo's property means Bo's money, houses...etc.
1. Is houses appropriate to decribe one of the property Bo. What is the subsitute of houses?
2. What is the subsitute of money?
3. What is the phrases to decribe the stock among the property?
4. What is the phrases to decribe the diamond and other expensive jewelarys among the property?
5. Are the above sentences correct?
Ju
I find your questions difficult to understand. I think I can make one correction in them though. When you say "substitute of money" and "substitute of houses", you probably mean the words "money" and "houses", not just money and houses -- the things. If I'm right it would be better if you had used the quotation marks:
"money" -- the word that denotes the stuff you give others for goods
money -- the stuff you give others for goods.
Land and buildings, etc. are called "real property." Everything else is "personal property."
Real property - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See above. In BrE, property can mean both "houses etc" and "things that you own".
If someone asked me "How much property do you have?" I would not say "I own thousands of things - clothes and a car and books and CDs etc etc etc". That's clearly not what they meant. The answer would be "I own two properties. I have a flat in London and a large house in Liverpool."
If a policeman approached me carrying a silver necklace but I was standing outside my own house, and he said "Excuse me, is this your property?" I would have no way of knowing if he meant "Do you own this house?" or "Is this your silver necklace?"
In AmE it's easier to distinguish I believe, because they use "real estate". As someone said "real property" is used in BrE only in wills and other legal documents.
All the things that Bo owns (property, money, stocks, etc.).are his assets.