How To Use Fruition In A Sentence

  • But more needs to be done with stories like this particular one, if you want to see your hard work come to fruition in ousting George W. Bush from the White House, along with any other of his cronies who have blood on their hands, from George W. Bush†™ s futile ‘War On Terror†™. Think Progress » 60 Minutes: CIA Official Reveals Bush, Cheney, Rice Were Personally Told Iraq Had No WMD in Fall 2002
  • Whether you love or hate the new Doctor Who, prepare to polarise your thoughts even further one way or the other, if this latest rumour ever comes to fruition. 2010 June : Chronicles Network: Science Fiction & Fantasy
  • Mr Winter said: ‘If the project comes to fruition it will be a marvellous regenerator for the community and a wonderful opportunity for the young people of Thorne.’
  • In a way, the new novel is a literary fruition of the essay.
  • The whole of divine revelation comes to full fruition in him.
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  • This feeling is our superessential blessedness, which is a fruition of God and all His beloved: and this blessedness is that Dark Quiet which ever abides in idleness. The Adornment of the Spritual Marriage
  • None of his grand plans for a TV series ever came to fruition.
  • New concepts could take months or even years to come to fruition before the finished work was discussed and explained to the family.
  • We can see the fruition of its policy in the venture capital provisions of this bill.
  • The dividend should be able to grow as the company's promising pipeline comes to fruition in coming years. Times, Sunday Times
  • They represent what is given in our lives and, as the fruition of past actions, stand beyond our ability to make them other than what they are.
  • His Holiness, however, with energy and determination, guided the project to fruition.
  • The psychological profiles they had studied, the charts they had projected, the whole scenario, all coming to fruition. THE LAST RAVEN
  • By seeing it as the fruition of her own previous actions, she was able to take full responsibility for it and use it.
  • Losing weight demands preparation, effort and commitment to come to fruition.
  • A stint with the legendary Byron Nelson and an inner determination to take a challenge head on came to fruition with his maiden win - the Western Open in 1974.
  • It is also my intention that support materials, both in writing and on DVD or videotape will come to fruition as a result of this annual event.
  • I still remember the B&B and macadamia orchard confiscated by the Zapatistas in Ocosingo a few years ago where the Zapatistas waited until the macadamia trees were in full fruition commercially speaking, confiscated the orchard from the foreign owners and then laid waste to it. Indian Land Grab on Michoacan Coast
  • It also discusses their popularity and the fruition of their language.
  • And now, as we see those fears removed, and those hopes reaching fruition, is it too soon, even on this day of humiliation and sadness, in view of all that has been done, -- in view of all that has been gained, and of all that has been Strength in Sorrow
  • Now, everyone has come together for joint rehearsals at Queen Anne School this week, the fruition of all those weeks of preparation.
  • His plan to get the old lady back for her minor rudeness was coming to literal fruition.
  • We have three at present but the plan, whether it comes to fruition or not, is for four.
  • Despite, or perhaps thanks to, the U.S. embargo of that rhythmically rich island, Cuban culture has flowered into exotic fruition in an isolated hothouse.
  • Some days passed before I could rid my thoughts of Thecla of certain impressions belonging to the false Thecla who had initiated me into the anacreontic diversions and fruitions of men and women. The Shadow of the Torturer
  • With a tough run of matches in front of them it was important the Rams remained unbeaten in order to maintain their league position as the critical part of the season comes to fruition.
  • These things are being bandied around and nowhere near coming to fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • No Miss Palin, the chior you continually preach to do not support this, the reast of us who live in the real world do support this reform and the path it is following into fruition. Palin slams Senate health care vote
  • Several academic projects that have been mentioned on the blog have yet to come to fruition, including that long-delayed manuscript on British dinosaur diversity, and work on Cretaceous Spanish vertebrates, Wealden sauropods, and azhdarchid ecology. Archive 2007-01-01
  • This feeling is our superessential blessedness, which is a fruition of God and all His beloved: and this blessedness is that Dark Quiet which ever abides in idleness. The Adornment of the Spritual Marriage
  • But if nothing came to fruition, a fall of an equivalent amount could be on the cards.
  • In the absence of bodies, his poem becomes simultaneously the space of their imaginary union and the fruition of it - a textual body.
  • ‘This will be the fruition of efforts I have put in for the past seven decades,’ the musician said.
  • This is the fruition of a childhood dream - to hang out with the old biddies on Miami Beach in a purple caftan and red hat being fabulous.
  • None of his grand plans for a TV series ever came to fruition.
  • For the winner, that prize money is intended to fund their proposal from sketchy concept to full fruition over the year ahead. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tonight was the real deal; everything I'd trained for was coming to fruition, complete with tracer fire and maybe a few rockets being launched down there in the dark void of Afghanistan.
  • The words are not very satisfactory because the deathward tendency masquerades as the lifeward tendency, and the lifeward tendency, before fruition, looks like the deathward one. The New Theology
  • The technical difficulty in bringing the changes to fruition says something about how dramatic they are.
  • Her major gratifications were seeing the many social services she was instrumental in initiating come to fruition, among them day care for senior citizens.
  • Poison Arrows is the fruition of the band's new direction, but the results, while intermittently catchy, are largely unremarkable.
  • That glorious event will finally bring life, light, fire and love to their complete fruition.
  • The personal fruition in any man, cannot reach to feel great riches: there is a custody of them; or a power of dole, and donative of them; or a fame of them; but no solid use to the owner. The Essays
  • The invitations to tender are the first stage in a purchasing plan that is likely to take almost a decade to reach fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • As far as the "Plan Puebla-Panama" is concerned; I did not bring it up and have no idea what it is but I´ll bet you the shirt off my back that it does not amount to a hill of beans and will never come to fruition. Plan Puebla-Panama. Yay or Nay?
  • Since Crist's labeling a while back of these efforts as "cockamamie", it appears that he has logged a full workday recently enough to understand that those cockamamie efforts are finally coming to fruition. Florida Republican Party Rotting From Top Down
  • The owner of the yawl, was on hand to see it begin its journey and was delighted to see the project come to fruition.
  • Ambitious plans to turn a South Yorkshire museum into a showpiece regional attraction are finally about to come to fruition following a £2m Lottery grant.
  • It's the fruition of one of the core and noblest of American ideals, the free and open marketplace of ideas.
  • Here we have two partners with two different histories and perspectives striving to bring their individual and collective best to fruition in their offspring.
  • That their predictions have not yet come to fruition is an anomaly of economics. not technology. The coming revolution that will change everything. « The Paradigm Shift
  • It heralded decades of concerted efforts by generations of African leaders and peoples to bring closer to fruition the concretisation of the vision of Pan-Africanism and the realisation of an African Renaissance. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Have already occurred (Night vii.) but such carelessness is characteristic despite the proverb, “In repetition is no fruition.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Einstein brought this vision to fruition by way of a successful mathematical theory.
  • Reconciliation embraces the fruition of all those things.
  • It has been a pleasure to work with David in bringing his project to fruition, and to witness the formation of a new and intriguing chapter in the ongoing history of Constable’s clouds, perhaps more cirrhus than cumulus, but certainly bound to illuminate a fertile art-historical landscape, as much as that landscape has evidently provided nourishment for David’s new work. Archive 2009-04-01
  • If we act in a purely selfish, self-serving manner, then the future fruition of that action will be negative.
  • Beyond the increase in activity of the human kind, the dream of Scylla turning into an underwater haven for marine life looks to be turning to fruition.
  • An unwanted child is a greater crime than miscarrying which is no crime at all, but would be if you took your anti-abortion laws to fruition. People who have nothing to hide, hide nothing.
  • His many friends are rejoiced at the happy fruition of his vocation, and will wish him many long years in the sacred ministry to work for the honour and glory of God.
  • Two years later that policy was partly brought to fruition in the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms when dyarchy, that is to say a dual system of government, was introduced into the provinces, whereby the Governors ruled their provinces with the aid of Cabinets, chosen from Indian Legislatures, but at the same time certain subjects were reserved and among them law and order, so that there might not be too abrupt a transition from unitarian government to responsible government in the provinces. Changing India
  • From the chorus to the rappers students gave their all, bringing weeks of hard work to fruition.
  • It was a lofty ideal, but it has come to fruition sooner than many expected. Times, Sunday Times
  • For a moment, just accept the fact that many people actually believe that Iran has that program and a confrontation is designed to 1. verify that belief and 2. prevent it from achieving fruition because the consequences would lead to an all-out nuclear arms race in the middle east. Matthew Yglesias » Dennis Ross is So Very Special
  • So if the forecast verifies, meaning if the forecast continues and actually comes to fruition come Monday night and this thing makes landfall somewhere between Louisiana and Pensacola, Florida, as a Category 4, then, yes. CNN Transcript Aug 26, 2005
  • Cool stuff indeed, but the probability that any of it comes to fruition is worth analyzing after the jump. Could Jonah Nolan Direct MAN OF STEEL While Christopher Nolan Directs JUSTICE LEAGUE? – Collider.com
  • Then the lovers met, and the old Queen acquainted the two Princesses with all that had passed between Sayf al-Muluk and the Blue King and how the Prince had been nearhand to a captive’s death; but in repetition is no fruition. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • For me, more than 30 years of sighthound breeding have come to fruition. Spay Neuter
  • September is a month of fruition, pleasing sunsets and being able to have a fire again without feeling guilty.
  • His only hope of coming to true fruition is to get to America, where there is insurmountable opportunity. 2010 February 09 « The BookBanter Blog
  • A wife's quest to honour her husband's memory came to fruition on Friday evening when an impressive new Grotto was unveiled in Bangor.
  • Major naval, military and railway construction programmes scheduled to come to fruition in 1917-18 argued strongly for delay.
  • Their efforts came to fruition many years later.
  • What about encouraging students to become politically aware and involved, to set personal and academic goals and to take responsibility for doing what they can to bring those goals to fruition is socialist???? Florida GOP chair: Obama trying to 'indoctrinate' children
  • None of his grand plans for a TV series ever came to fruition.
  • Government sources said it was unlikely that the deal would reach fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • Last year saw the fruition of his Holy Island project – when the retreat centre for world peace was finally opened. A religion for everyone?
  • This image, of the child as a gift that is the fruition not of an act of rational will but an act of love, can be contrasted with an image of the child as the parents' project or product.
  • By the classical era the Sun's transit through the zodiac sign had taken precedence and Virgo became more directly perceived as a Maiden of fruition through the Harvest.
  • It is a product of vision and the fruition of good planning.
  • Months of very hard graft and endeavour came to fruition last Sunday afternoon with the opening of the Daisy Chains pre-school.
  • But in another sense, academic blogging represents the fruition, not a betrayal, of the university's ideals.
  • The guano is harvested and mixed with saliva from kimodo lizards and allowed to grow to fruition within the alimentary canals of squids culled from the Ganges and is then scraped from the ink sacs and placed in vats filled with duck heads. 23 hours later a judge emerges, ready to think. Uh-Oh
  • Most of the work was done on a voluntary basis with bricklayers, plasterers, joiners, electricians, plumbers, painters and general handymen all freely giving their time and expertise to bring this great project to fruition.
  • The women's suffrage movement was brought to fruition, as was the campaign against alcohol. The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
  • He had another plan, one that would take years to reach fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • Just a thought, a brush of desire against its surface, and it unfurled like a bud in springtime, and years of searching came to fruition. The Grace of the Foolish « A Fly in Amber
  • One or two big projects that I've had rumbling on in the background, not really my core job but those nice added extras that we'd all like to be able to play with, have finally come to fruition.
  • His many friends are rejoiced at the happy fruition of his vocation, and will wish him many long years in the sacred ministry to work for the honour and glory of God.
  • Next Monday night was to be the fruition of all the plans they laid when they were together.
  • There the spirit is embraced by the Holy Trinity, and dwells for ever within the superessential Unity, in rest and fruition. The Adornment of the Spritual Marriage
  • But this isn't just tyrannical naysaying; for once you and your local despots should be on the same page: everyone wants to see this particular dream come to fruition.
  • The policy was the fruition of three years of student struggle and grassroots mobilization.
  • We have meditated and worked with our mind, and this is the fruition.
  • Have experienced too much to think that you do not have imperfections and bad days, but what you have accomplished with unwavering hard work as a loving husband and father while bringing your dream of owning a vineyard and producing your own wines to fruition is no small feat but a tribute to a tough, loving, wise, and devoted man. Se reposer sur ses lauriers - French Word-A-Day
  • As clocks strike midnight across Europe, ten years of planning comes to fruition.
  • Many of your more bizarre or outlandish schemes will come to fruition.
  • Why then, applying that same principle to preserving the geophysical world, has there yet to be an "occupy the world" movement come to fruition? Mike Smith: Ed Begley Cleans Up His Act
  • I truly believe that a country where the people hold steadfast to their dreams will some day see them come to fruition.
  • The centre piece and anchor store in Centrale, House of Fraser's arrival brings six years of planning and construction to fruition, and promises to bring shoppers flocking back to Croydon.
  • All the hard work and dedication to rehearsals came to fruition when the panto opened in January.
  • Her major gratifications were seeing the many social services she was instrumental in initiating come to fruition, among them day care for senior citizens.
  • In the process of bringing the film to fruition, some obstacles that seemed insurmountable were overcome.
  • The psychological profiles they had studied, the charts they had projected, the whole scenario, all coming to fruition. THE LAST RAVEN
  • Some, it has to be said, have been worked on anew to bring them to fruition. The Sun
  • None of these visionary schemes for Niagara ever reached fruition, but one Utopian dreamer did achieve his objective.
  • But the notion of chemotropism came to fruition only a decade later in the context of nerve regeneration.
  • In other words, the fruition of life on the various planets of the millions of solar systems might be the product of a wandering group of astronautic Johnny The Practical Values of Space Exploration Report of the Committee on Science and Astronautics, U.S. House of Representatives, Eighty-Sixth Congress, Second Session
  • His proposals only came to fruition after the war.
  • I have a simple business model that, though unlikely to come to fruition, is simply too good to be overlooked. What’s Your Personal Business Model? | Lifehacker Australia
  • It took more than six months for the crop to reach fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • The past year has seen a number of significant milestones in Lismore, and I believe, many local people and visitors alike will soon begin to see the fruition of some hard work.
  • Over the next few years the Nursery Ground will alter beyond recognition as plans for flats and a hotel are due to reach fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • After all, they are the ones who have been living with the ideas, conception and finally the fruition of the game.
  • Plus, something you worked or wished for all year comes to fruition. The Sun
  • Him hereafter, as by the conferring cause, when hope shall be swallowed up in fruition [Pearson]. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The clause is describing an important step in bringing the process of self-actualization to fruition.
  • For by this time he had artfully concentred and kindled up all the inflammable ingredients of her constitution; and she now looked back upon the virtuous principles of her education, as upon a disagreeable and tedious dream, from which she had waked to the fruition of never-fading joy. The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom
  • It also describes how nineteenth- and twentieth-century-plans for waterways and the Rock Creek and Potomac parkways were brought to fruition.
  • Most of the work was done on a voluntary basis with bricklayers, plasterers, joiners, electricians, plumbers, painters and general handymen all freely giving their time and expertise to bring this great project to fruition.
  • For all of us, a revolution that has long been predicted is finally coming to fruition: tools will become indistinguishable from our own body parts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Would you have weeped if the plans these people hatched came to fruition? Straight from the top (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • Through their efforts, many new initiatives have come to fruition, programs that will benefit the membership in these challenging times.
  • It represents the fruition of a year's negotiations by a man virtually unknown in Scotland, even though he was reared in Dunbartonshire.
  • The only way you'll ever see long term projects such as the VSE or SBSP come to fruition is to hand NASA lock stock and barrel to the Congress. Canceling SOMD's Space Based Solar Power Work - NASA Watch
  • Many thanks indeed to the people who have brought this project to fruition.
  • It was their just reward last week to see the fruits of their labour come to fruition and be recognised.
  • Libertines brought to fruition a form of anti-Christian and antihumanistic Aristotelianism that led to a radical naturalism. Army Rumour Service
  • After much delay, the plan to build the new hospital finally came to fruition.
  • Prominent writers approached me with offers of collaboration, but in tossing ideas around with them I couldn't visualize the project coming to fruition. The Story Behind Dune: House Atreides by Brian Herbert
  • IRVINE - A long-running grass-roots effort to turn the corner of a community park into a military memorial reached fruition on Tuesday night, with Irvine leaders approving a permanent Northwood Gratitude and Honor memorial. The Orange County Register - News Headlines : News
  • Our dream, which is slowly coming to fruition, is to have our wines linked to the country's image and tourism, just like regions like Tuscany or Piemonte boast of their wines, " he said.
  • It was a lofty ideal, but it has come to fruition sooner than many expected. Times, Sunday Times
  • Our salvation begins with God's choice to save us, it continues via the inner work of the Spirit in our hearts, and it comes to fruition when we confess faith in His truth.
  • Grateful thanks was extended to all who put so much work into bringing the venture to fruition.
  • For all of us, a revolution that has long been predicted is finally coming to fruition: tools will become indistinguishable from our own body parts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Work is due to commence shortly and it is estimated it will take a year to bring this project to fruition.
  • Being an earth sign, he is willing to focus on the long term and whatever he began nine years ago should now come to fruition.
  • Alert stillness is needed, as the harvest comes to fruition, and to become aware of God's created beauty, the majesty, the sacredness of nature, as He saw fit to create with His hands. For the Love of Venison!
  • If you can't touch the past, you can't bring about the fruition of democracy.
  • The summer has still to reach its fruition, but the signs of hidden decline are there. Phoenix From the Flame
  • After much delay, the plan to build the new hospital finally came to fruition.
  • The price could actually swell to 415 millions smackers if certain team performance incentives come to fruition in the next few years.
  • While it might seem like an eternity for your thesis to be proven, its fruition is often well worth the wait.
  • He felt a thrill of accomplishment about to come to fruition: the clever boy bringing a term project to school at last. The Deed
  • Before they knew it, the culmination of months of thoughtful planning came to fruition. Times, Sunday Times
  • So maybe NNs catch a pattern which gives an insight which … And maybe the Laplacian efforts to model climate may come to fruition. Willis E on Hansen and Model Reliability « Climate Audit

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