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 fruition [fru:'iʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 成就, 实现, 结果实

  1. Success is the fruition of his years of work.
    成功是他多年工作的成果。
  2. At last his efforts were coming to fruition.
    他的努力终于逐渐取得了成效。
  3. Our efforts have come to fruition.
    我们的努力有了成果。


fruition
[ noun ]
  1. the condition of bearing fruit

  2. <noun.state>
  3. enjoyment derived from use or possession

  4. <noun.attribute>
  5. something that is made real or concrete

  6. <noun.act>
    the victory was the realization of a whole year's work


Fruition \Fru*i"tion\, n. [OF. fruition, L. fruitio, enjoyment,
fr. L. frui, p. p. fruitus, to use or enjoy. See {Fruit}, n.]
Use or possession of anything, especially such as is
accompanied with pleasure or satisfaction; pleasure derived
from possession or use. ``Capacity of fruition.'' --Rogers.
``Godlike fruition.'' --Milton.

Where I may have fruition of her love. --Shak.

  1. Yet surely the cure for fragile democracy is not less democracy. These populist movements in Eastern Europe are the fruition of last year's revolutions.
  2. He is even prepared to countenance Hughes becoming involved in television programme acquisition and revenue collection from subscribers to any channels he set up. Such plans are still several years from fruition.
  3. USING the Victorian Gothic vastness of St Pancras Station to show specially commissioned work by a selection of contemporary artists is an exciting idea, which has been brought to fruition in an exhibition organised by Camden Arts Centre.
  4. And she has a budget of $4.8 million, up $1 million from the previous season, to bring her plans to fruition.
  5. The company's valuation will be boosted substantially - perhaps by two to three times - if potential investors perceive that preliminary agreements to export gas to northern Chile and Brazil will come to fruition soon.
  6. Still, bringing such joint ventures to fruition is no easy feat, participants warn.
  7. As it was, he was unable to see his policies to fruition.
  8. "What is important for us is that these meetings and contacts and dialogues take place in advance of the conference so that the conference itself becomes the form in which to bring our agreement to fruition," he said.
  9. Christo hopes to bring The Umbrellas to fruition in October 1990.
  10. "He set out to do a task, he's done it, and he's seeing the fruition of it," the source said Tuesday. "Now he's going on to the next phase of his life."
  11. Equimark, which has about $3.8 billion in assets, had added staff assuming that the deal would come to fruition.
  12. The US biotechnology sector will need an additional Dollars 15bn-Dollars 20bn funding before the products now under development come to fruition.
  13. Col. Rabuka's beliefs are the fruition of European Methodist missionaries who set foot on the shores of Fiji around 1835 to convert tribes whose life style included devouring one another.
  14. And I do mean "we." We have come a long way together _ from the intellectual wilderness of the 1960s, through the heated intellectual battles of the 1970s, to the intellectual fruition of the 1980s.
  15. The pharmaceutical industry generally leads other sectors in its development of work-family programmes, presumably because it is particularly dependent on a highly educated workforce conducting research which can take many years to come to fruition.
  16. Resolution 598 _ the year-old Persian Gulf peace plan _ is coming to fruition.
  17. Some of us, who were personal or official participants in the days when the U.S. was able to supply needed material and morale boosts to a destitute nation, now rejoice that the better life we thought possible for Korea has come to fruition.
  18. Nothing, however, appears close to fruition.
  19. In the last year, we've been quite lucky and our deals have come to fruition.
  20. Educational Hazard We wish to see Our children's dreams Come to some fruition.
  21. But Olivier was proudest of his work founding Britain's National Theater. "Only a man of his titanic standing and relentless energy could have brought the project to fruition," wrote Alan Hamilton in The Times.
  22. If this weren't the case, I believe a budget deficit agreement between the administration and Congress raising taxes $9 billion in 1988 and $14 billion in 1989 never would have come to fruition.
  23. But Mr. Smithburg provided no details other than to say: "None (of the talks) has come to fruition and we're proceeding with the spinoff."
  24. For the moment, neither the inflation nor the recession worries that have beset the financial world in recent months appear to have come to fruition.
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