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Discover Ludwig"conjure up something" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to refer to summoning or bringing something into one's imagination. For example: "Close your eyes and take a deep breath. Now try to conjure up something beautiful in your mind."
Exact(16)
That very phrase seems to conjure up something.
Sticky will need to conjure up something special to shake those albatrosses free.
JITTERY investors and anxious politicians have often relied on Federal Reserve chairmen to conjure up something to steady their nerves.
And if you want to conjure up something frightening, think of America without it.
THINK of the word "bluestocking" and you are likely to conjure up something female, formidable and frumpy a dingy corner of feminism, the historical equivalent of dungarees.
They are less a way to conjure up something out of nothing than to stir a pot that is already bubbling.
Similar(44)
It may also be that the phrase bedroom tax conjures up something so eye-stingingly awful, so intrusive, so snooperish, such a bullying intervention into – literally – the most private area of life, that decent people instinctively shudder.
But once you've conjured up something like that, its impossible to get the bloody thing out of your head.
I'm conjuring up something slim and trough-like, stuffed with neat little bushes and romantic trailers.
But when Ms. Hynde sings it, she conjures up something less combustible -- less hot -- than romantic passion.
I suppose it could be a vision of the future, but the word more readily conjures up something from the remote past.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com