2 to develop a new design, product, idea, etc.:
The market leader's proven ability to innovate provides a key attraction for shareholders.
The result was the production of satisfactory and high quality works, extremely innovating and incisive in some instances.
Many of these improvements were carried out on the home farm, but encouragement to innovate on tenant farms can also be seen.
They innovated words which are historical evidence of the lessons they learned.
In doing so, the students drew from and innovated with the existing repertoire of collective action.
Above all, this proposal aims to correct the allocative inefficiencies of the existing patent system, while preserving the dynamic incentives to innovate.
More autonomous agencies can innovate and shape policy direction on their own while less autonomous agencies are more dependent on their political superiors.
But it also sets up limits that the creative mind must be able to break in order to innovate.
Early movement activity drew upon and innovated with traditional repertoire staples such as the round table discussion, the march, and the public pronouncement.