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The phrase "never comes to fruition" is correct and can be used in written English
You can use this phrase to describe plans, goals, hopes, or expectations that never materialize, regardless of how much effort is invested in them. For example, "Despite months of hard work, his dream of becoming a professional athlete never came to fruition."
Exact(9)
If you start too big it's very easy to lose interest and it never comes to fruition.
Unfortunately, his model metropolis never comes to fruition and both he and his bureau liaison get much of the slack for destroying one of America's greatest cities.
Even if the project itself never comes to fruition, though, the video deserves a life of its own, as a window into what our era promises and what it threatens to take away.
Though that plot never comes to fruition, we do watch Harry and Diego as they talk up its erotic potential — simultaneously aroused and amused, like so many souls before them in the work of Almodóvar.
Though that plot never comes to fruition, we do watch Harry and Diego as they talk up its erotic potential simultaneously aroused and amused, like so many souls before them in the work of Almodóvar.
The movie never comes to fruition.
Similar(46)
The project never came to fruition.
That project never came to fruition.
But the plans never came to fruition.
But that never came to fruition.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com