Come up with
come up with (verb) - 1. think of an idea and present it, 2. manage to get money when it is needed
come up with the cash
come up with the cash quick
come up with the cash quick or you're a goner
come up with the rest of the cash
failed to come up with the cash and suddenly disappeared
come up with ideas
come up with fresh ideas
come up with fresh ideas of your own
come up with suggestions
come up with a soluition
come up with a solution to the problem
he came up with a plan to solve the problem
what did you come up with?
come up with an answer
they will come up with an answer: yes or no
come up with ideas
had to come up with a leaner and meaner business plan
that there was more to be said about the mad love than he allowed himself, or was in a position, to come up with
failed to come up with new ideas
come up with worse stories than those already in the media
come up with a new method
come up with something more suitable
please come up with something more suitable for the children
come up with a novel idea
worked slowly and laboriously through the records and came up with three names
I've come up with the safest combination
come up with a way of beating the house at blackjack
come up with a new version
come up with a reasonable offer
encourage reticent people to come up with ideas
no amount of detailed research is ever likely to come up with reliable figures
come up with new knowledge
it took a lot of thought to come up with this idea
identify the main market and come up with a good campaign to target it
he came up with a credible answer
she came up with an incredible answer
if you come up with some sensible idea yes, please tell me
come up with completely irrelevant things...
have absolutely no idea how they come up with their current ratings
come up with a number of ways to find letterbombs, before they find their target
Example sentences:
* Didn't they come up with anything?
* We will have to come up with something.
* Come up with anything new?
* One firm has come up with a number of ways to find letterbombs, before they find their target.
* We would probably sell them the name if they come up with a reasonable offer.
* This left five days for the Patent Office and its advertising agency, Ayer, to come up with a new version.
* We must encourage reticent people to come up with ideas.
* He said Russian president Boris Yeltsin had failed to come up with new ideas and had put politics above the national interest.
* The City will bang a few numbers into its computers, mutter something about sector relative p/e ratios and come up with an answer: yes or no.
* Alwyn has come up with a novel idea, producing a book which is directly associated with the painting holiday courses he runs.
* They would not have come up with the rest of the cash for at least another year.
* Micro Focus Plc has come up with a new method for charging for licences to its Unix software, which it calls Unix Concurrent User Licensing.
* This could be moved to Sunday if the Drama Department could come up with something more suitable.
* And if you come up with some sensible idea yes, please tell me.
* Er, generally and for the most part and for the most part at the end of the day they'll come up with completely irrelevant er things .
* Having done Mathematics on college I have absolutely no idea how they come up with their current ratings.
* It is also possible to feel, and to be told in London, that there was more to be said about the mad love than he allowed himself, or was in a position, to come up with.
* Both Soviet and foreign estimates of the numbers threatened with starvation and death over the period 1921-;2 varied enormously, and no amount of detailed research is ever likely to come up with reliable figures.
* However, we believe that those who are determined to understand a phenomenon and to follow their research and their intuition wherever they may lead, are on the balance of probabilities, perhaps more likely to come up with new knowledge than those who are trying to solve a narrowly defined problem or to develop a product.
* Clive had to have them, because the competition did, but since the benefits were at best indirect he had to come up with the idea of asking the students from each country to get together and prepare a typical national dish.
* After working through this example try to come up with some other bass line/double-stop ideas of your own.
* The main reason that I was allowed to do the research was, I learned later, because their press was so bad the Moonies could not believe that someone who would listen to what they said could possibly come up with worse stories than those already in the media.
* And, by the way," he added, as if it was all part of the same subject," I think I've come up with the safest combination of captain and crew for your journey.
* One of his assistants had worked slowly and laboriously through the records and come up with half-a-dozen prints which looked at least similar to the ones taken from Paula Wilson.
* Take one simple example: in 1975 journalists Sydney Schanberg, Jon Swain and photographer Al Rockoff were holed up in the French Embassy in Phnom Penh trying to come up with a way of preventing Dith Pran being taken by the Khmer Rouge and to get out of there alive.
* On the shores of uncharted CCT requirements the Computer Co-ordination Section has realised that it had to come up with a leaner, meaner, faster name for the Section.
* No, fair do's, it takes a lot of forethought to come up with that one.
* I shall need a first-class advertising agency which can identify the main market and come up with a good campaign to target it, woo it with words and obtain a high conversion rate of sales.';






