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Seeing these projects come to fruition at once is stressful but empowering, Ms. Hanna said.
The vision Mr. Ohga championed for years, those analysts say, has come to fruition at Apple, in a different guise.
Then it doesn't come to fruition at the pinnacle of your career or of your season and that's the Olympics.
It had long been thought that the Cosmos would gain entry to Major League Soccer, but those efforts have obviously not come to fruition, at least not yet.
A century after Littlewood's birth, the dream she and architect Cedric Price nurtured will come to fruition at venues across the country as well as in Europe, the US and Canada.
Remarkably, two plausible methods of finding longitude had, finally, come to fruition at almost exactly the same time: 1757: Mayer sent his theory of the Moon's motion to the Board of Longitude.
Similar(42)
Undoubtedly the tie of the last 16, it had looked like it would not come to fruition as the Gunners struggled at the Hawthorns.
The idea came to fruition at a most opportune time.
It finally came to fruition at five to five.
The big news is in Bristol, where the Old Vic/Handspring puppet company collaboration on A Midsummer Night's Dream comes to fruition at Bristol Old Vic.
Classical ballet, with origins in the 17th-century French court ballet, came to fruition at the Russian Imperial School of Ballet, directed in the 19th century by Marius Petipa, and in the works of the Italian choreographic masters Carlo Blasis and Enrico Cecchetti.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com