word choice - "Ideas on" vs. "ideas for"


I'd like to know when to use "ideas on" and "ideas for". I think these are correct:




  • I'd like some ideas on how to improve my team.

  • I'd like some ideas for improving my team.

  • I have some ideas on that subject.



This feels less correct to me:



I'd like some ideas for how to improve my team.



This feels plain wrong:



I have some ideas for that subject.



However, I don't know why. Which phrase should I use, and when?


Edit: I'm specifically interested in the grammar breakdown — is that last one wrong because it's a noun? What about "how" — how does this change it? What are the rules?



Answer



Cambridge Dictionary Online suggests these proposition for "idea":



If you have any ideas for what I could buy Jack, let me know.


That's when I first had the idea of start ing (= planned to start) my own business.



And about your example:



I'd like some ideas for how to improve my team.



sounds odd and wrong. After "for" a ing-clause is used and after "on" a relative-clause.



Ideas on what to eat to night


Ideas on how to learn


Ideas on where to go



And



Ideas for eating


Ideas for living



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

etymology - Origin of "s--t eating grin"

usage - "there doesn't seem" vs. "there don't seem"

First floor vs ground floor, usage origin

meaning - What is synonyme of "scale"?

etymology - Since when has "a hot minute" meant a long time?

meaning - "Instable" or "unstable"?

time - English notation for hour, minutes and seconds