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Discover LudwigThe phrase "ready idea" is not correct or usable in written English
If you want to refer to an idea that is complete and ready to be used, you would say "ready-made idea". For example, "I didn't have to spend much time brainstorming because I already had a ready-made idea for the project."
Exact(2)
And when Gaiam asked her to work on another video, she had a ready idea for them: hooping.
He may mean that one can gain a rough and ready idea of space of a three-dimensional magnitude that is not itself a property of any object or grouping of objects in the way that he describes.
Similar(58)
Environmental conditions have to be ready, ideas must come to fruition, and then, and only then, does the artist of that moment appear.
As for this beach body-ready idea, it doesn't affect me because I can't swim.
I'm ready!" The idea of a chick acting as the Easter Bunny strikes the father as so outlandish that it makes him laugh in Carlos' face.
Sometimes the boys are ready with ideas.
Its rounded characters were an expression of triumphant bourgeois individualism; its lifelike plots mirrored readers' "ready-made idea of reality".
In the Ottomans, they found the ready-made idea of a prosperous Muslim élite, trading on an equal footing with Europe but preferring halvah to profiteroles.
The problem with Werner was that he, the stage actor, came to the part with a ready-made idea which was not at all mine.
Secretly I think I may like that long, isolated, private part where you are readying an idea for the world, that being alone.
I call on them join all of us at the reform table, ready with ideas, excited for change, and willing to say yes.
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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