Columbus Dispatch: Bexley High School staff, others try to creatively fill pages of yearbooks
Bexley High School staff, others try to creatively fill pages of yearbooks
The Spokesman-Review: Pages of the past: High school yearbooks remain popular in a digital age
Pages of the past: High school yearbooks remain popular in a digital age
Orlando Sentinel: Seminole schools offer to remove LGBTQ+ pages from high school yearbook
Seminole County Public Schools is offering to reprint this year’s Lyman High School yearbook and remove two pages for parents upset about LGBTQ+ content, prompting criticism that the district isn’t ...
Complex concepts distilled into simple ideas could be described as pithy, or full of concentrated meaning. Also, one who expresses oneself in a pithy manner could be described as pithy.
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.
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.
"Ideas on" vs. "ideas for" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
In the sentence for example: This book would also interest intelligent students with a taste for abstract ideas and theoretical arguments. What does the phrase "abstract ideas" mean? I looked up ...