You could say blade brawl i guess.
Instead of saying he or she, you could say they. Instead of saying his or hers, you could say their. It depends on the what you mean by address them and in what context.
Yes, like if you are a child of Athena, you could say you build things up, instead of tearing things down like Poseidon, the god of earthquakes. Or you could say that horses stink, ( which I hope they do not...) because Poseidon is the god of horses.
je voudrais pouvoir dire toutes les choses que j'ai à dire (properly: that I have to say instead of that I want to say)
No, Instead you could say 'the volunteering spirit'
It has to do with pronuciation. We reduced "have" to "of" when we speak, but the actual word is "have."
Well, not that I see any reason for avoiding questions, but you could start out with statements instead. You could say things like "Nice day today" or "You seem happy." You could comments on a lot of things without actually asking about them. You could say, "Wow, it is hot today" or "I like your shirt," or a thousand other things that won't offend people, or require a response, but that might get them to talk if they want to.
Instead means in place of something, so you could say, instead of the color blue, I like the color green.
they say doctor could helpyou find out on these things but its not true they say doctor could helpyou find out on these things but its not true
instead of saying when asked you could say "when I questioned" or "when I interrogated."
Yes. "They" is a pronoun, which renames other nouns. For example, instead of saying "They are going to the mall." you could say "Billy and Maria are going to the mall."
Most of the time they'll say bad things...the good things will come if there uh "happy"