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When talking about what something is, they can both be used the same way. The difference is their additional definitions: A property can mean land or a house. Attributing something means to give credit to someone (usually a writer).
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Some phrases require one or the other: He speaks English. We had a talk. (meaning I confronted him about something.)
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"Passing" would mean death. To use "final passing" in that way would be redundant. Sounds like his career or his reputation is over. "Ritual demise" implies that he's facing something reminiscent of death, not
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Not that I can enumerate why, but my preferences are: 1. relationship 2. relation 3. relation Relationship can describe the person someone is dating. Relation wouldn't be used in that context.
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1. He is going to satisfy any of her caprices. 2. He controls my every step. (this one is idiomatic, so you can't separate "every step".)
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Neither: One of them has left his umbrella. or Someone has left his umbrella.
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That describes what I would call a "fair-weather friend". I don't think there's a specific word in English for it. A hypocrite would treat you like garbage for not having a job, despite the fact that he doesn't have a job
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Even if you could, best not to. The more common usage is "there's friction between the two of them" and "he has a score to settle".
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Beautiful.
There's a common idiom "poetic justice", which is when someone deserving of punishment gets the perfect punishment by accident.
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Who sings a certain song
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