have a lot in common

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diamondcutter

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2014
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English Teacher
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
China
Current Location
China
I think the logic of the phrase “have a lot in common” is “have a lot of things in common quality” or “have a lot of things which share the same quality”.

Do you think my understanding makes a little sense?
I know many teachers would say it’s unnecessary for me to think that further but I’m just curious.
 
You are talking about the meaning of the phrase, not "the logic of the phrase".

What do you mean by "common quality"and "same quality"? Quality is ambiguous; it could mean standard or attribute.

I think it is not so much about quality but being "similar/comparable in many aspects". The dictionary defines it as "share the same interests or have similar characteristics".
 
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I don't know what you mean by 'in common quality' but it doesn't sound like it's right.

If two things have a lot in common, they share a lot of features/properties/qualities, etc.
 
If two people have a lot in common they like a lot of the same things. They might also have similar backgrounds.
 
If two people have a lot in common they like a lot of the same things. They might also have similar backgrounds.

Yes. And to add to that, they might have a lot of similar interests, tastes, experiences, physical attributes—the list can go on and on. It isn't confined just to 'qualities'.
 
We like similar music, food, etc, and share political views, etc.
 
Bear in mind that it's possible for two people to have a lot in common but also to disagree on a lot of things.
 
Oh no it isn't.

etc

:-D
 
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