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Coming from German I wonder what the correct idiom is here.

This brought me an idea.

or

This made me an idea.

or

This got me an idea.

or

This gave me an idea.

Well, I guess I could say

This made me think of an idea.

but I wonder what else is possible here.

What would you propose?

Peter Mortensen
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Cabbie407
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4 Answers4

25

"This gave me an idea" is what you're looking for. The others don't quite work, except for the final (slightly awkward sounding) non-idiomatic option at the bottom.

Phil Esra
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    Probably the most common form, depending on context, would be "That gives me an idea." – Phil Esra Sep 14 '15 at 06:47
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    Or even "This gives me an idea" or "That gave me an idea"... I wouldn't say either is more common except that we may more commonly speak in one tense or another... – J... Sep 14 '15 at 18:57
10

If you were going to use brought (which would make sense if the this you're referring to didn't immediately give you the idea, but rather led you through a series of logical steps that resulted in the idea) it would not be uncommon to say "This brought me to the idea of ______" or more commonly "This brought me to _____". This phrase is especially useful when documenting a series of similar events and you don't want to use the same phrase over and over again.

corsiKa
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1

"This/that gave/gives me an idea" is definitely a good way to go.

Your last example is similar to another common way to say this, which doesn't involved the word 'idea':

That made me think of something.

Which is what I commonly say.

Anything you think of is an idea, so it's not required that you use that word.

DCShannon
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0

imagine that 'This' is someone's name (for instance 'This Johnson'), and an 'Idea' is a brand name for something physical (for example a chair). Then it would be correct to say 'This brought me an Idea'. Otherwise you should be using 'This gave me an idea'

Barrie
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