To paraphrase Audre Lorde, we need poetry because there are no new ideas — only new ways of making them felt. "And, boy, do poems make us feel things," writes .
Springfield News-Leader: Poetry from Daily Life: Stumped for ideas? Start your poem with a single word
Poetry from Daily Life: Stumped for ideas? Start your poem with a single word
Education Week: Poem Trees, Lego Diagrams, and Other Ideas for Teaching National Poetry Month
Poem Trees, Lego Diagrams, and Other Ideas for Teaching National Poetry Month
New Haven Register: Poet laureate Robert Pinsky helps Arts & Ideas launch Favorite Poem Project
Poet laureate Robert Pinsky helps Arts & Ideas launch Favorite Poem Project
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 ...
What does 'abstract ideas' mean? [closed] - English Language & Usage ...
Why not just say "I would appreciate any ideas?" This article and others make a good case for using the active voice. The reason for saying "would be appreciated" as opposed to "are appreciated" is that the ideas haven't come in yet.
A common term for a man who generates ideas is ideas man n. (also idea man) [compare French homme d'idée intellectual (1832), homme à idées creative, inventive, or ingenious man (1935)] a creative, inventive, or ingenious man, a man who comes up with ideas.