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Discover LudwigThe phrase "achieve fruition" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the successful realization or completion of a goal or project.
Example: "After years of hard work and dedication, the team was finally able to achieve fruition with their innovative product launch."
Alternatives: "reach completion" or "realize success".
Exact(2)
"Want Two," filled with even more elaborately wrought songs, is set to come out next spring, though Mr. Wainwright fears, given the music industry's persistent doldrums, that such a grand plan might fail to achieve fruition.
Genetic engineering in mice has demonstrated that these mutations, and the order in which they arise, drive, and shape disease progression (Aguirre et al, 2003; Hingorani et al, 2003, 2005; Izeradjene et al, 2007), although efforts to target them directly to treat pancreas cancer have yet to achieve fruition.
Similar(58)
Humanism began and achieved fruition first in Italy.
The present time is an exciting one for those involved in cancer research and treatment, as several of the strategies embarked upon a decade ago to enable targeting of tumour therapy are now achieving fruition (Green, 2004).
Economic rationales (more = better) that came in with Adam Smith and are now achieving gaudy fruition in globalized hallucinations like the new Shanghai or the Palm Islands of Dubai seem spiritually threadbare — spectacularly pointless.
While the first two aims were achieved with relative ease, it is the economic dimension that has yet to reach fruition.
But Kickstarter allowed it to reach fruition.
That promise did not reach fruition quickly.
The garment in question has a swimming brand but, extraordinarily for a woman who has shattered the country's entire conception of what its swimmers can achieve, she is not tied up with a kit sponsor yet and no one wants to muddy the waters for the pursuit of one which is expected to reach fruition in the next few months.
Subsequent agreements to resume failed to reach fruition.
Skeptics question whether some promises will ever reach fruition.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com