noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
bring
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It is easy to make him look personally responsible for setting the process in train and bringing it to fruition .
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He discussed how he brought his idea to fruition .
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It is certainly a scheme that could, with a little organisation and planning, be brought into fruition in the future.
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The technical difficulty in bringing the changes to fruition says something about how dramatic they are.
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If even one-tenth of those bright ideas published could be brought to fruition , the world would be transformed.
come
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Neither came to fruition , and I shall never know why.
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Our unconscious plans are often the ones that come to fruition .
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However, the promised Unix showcase at Comdex/Spring last week never came to fruition .
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They say it could cause difficulties, but are waiting to see whether the idea will come to fruition .
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And in addition many of the conservation measures adopted following the first oil shock began to come to fruition .
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There was also consideration for two railways, one from Beverley and one from Bridlington, neither of which came to fruition .
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However, this did not come to fruition .
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The Witch King's long plan had come to fruition .
reach
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None of these visionary schemes for Niagara ever reached fruition , but one Utopian dreamer did achieve his objective.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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All too often, the antecedents of revolution are separated by more than a human lifespan from their fruition .
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And while they were away, he would allow her little dream to come to fruition .
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I am more than a little confident that its fruition will be more than evident before the last kick of the season.
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None of these visionary schemes for Niagara ever reached fruition , but one Utopian dreamer did achieve his objective.
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The technical difficulty in bringing the changes to fruition says something about how dramatic they are.