Sentence examples for acquired ideas from inspiring English sources

The phrase "acquired ideas" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to describe ideas that have been learned or acquired over time, rather than innate ideas. For example, "John has acquired many interesting ideas over the course of his life."

Exact(4)

By the time he was fourteen, he was hopelessly addicted to work but had acquired ideas about money.

For the first time, he acquired ideas with a political edge, and soon became assistant to the chief of staff, General Nasution.

At first sight, Ivan, a nephew of Julio and Lola, appears to be a cut above all this, having been to college and acquired ideas that, because they are different, strike everyone else as Marxist.

Not only did he appear delighted to learn and team up with others, in subsequent books and presentations he would share those newly acquired ideas as passionately as his own.

Similar(56)

This was an acquired idea of 'What is a woman?' What should a woman look like?

echoed to the pitter-patter of graduate students bubbling over with excitement at the possibility of applying some newly acquired idea to anthropology.

Thornton claimed that his instructional volumes were meant to "enable youth to acquire ideas as well as words". He had added a few illustrations to the Virgil second edition and sales were increased.

Not answering the Where From Question can leave a lingering sense that perhaps the typist under scrutiny acquires ideas under the counter from seedy backstreet inspiration dens, or cheaply from abroad, where they are bred in conditions involving cruelty and inadequate hygiene.

It has to engage with different types of partners to acquire ideas and resources from the external environment to stay ahead of the competition.

The success of idea competitions as a mechanism for acquiring ideas is challenging because very few ideas are selected from a huge pool of ideas submitted on crowdsourcing platforms (Mortara et al. 2013).

Hettinger argues that intellectual property "restricts methods of acquiring ideas (as do trade secrets), it restricts the use of ideas (as do patents), and it restricts the expression of ideas (as do copyrights)—restrictions undesirable for a number of reasons" (Hettinger 1989).

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