Ideas on vs. ideas for - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In the same way, using "for" in ideas on improving the team means you support improving the team while using "on" doesn't necessarily mean so It's all connotation and subconscious language use and effects
What is the word to describe the placement of two contrasting ideas . . . What is the word to describe when two ideas (often contrasting) are placed next to each other to enhance the situation or idea being presented? I believe it could describe the placement of two words or ideas in a poem, or two melodies in a song, or two objects in a piece of art
Is there an expression that sums up improperly conflating two ideas . . . It read: 'Is there an expression that sums up "falsely conflating two ideas that are really separate issues?"' while the question asks about things that indeed have been conflated, ie it is not false that they have been conflated I also changed 'characterizing a "package" of ideas' to 'characterizing disparate ideas'
Is there a word for connecting multiple disparate ideas together? The ideas I'm trying to express in this term include both the disparity of the beginning and end subjects and yet the overall lack of 'seam' or 'break' in the conversation -- each step is a natural outcropping of the previous part of the conversation