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The phrase "through to fruition" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to the completion of an ongoing process. For example, "It took three years for the project to come through to fruition."
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Seeing these ideas through to fruition involves determination, planning, negotiation, hard work and risk taking.
"I think it's an excellent opportunity and I'm hoping we're able to see it through to fruition," he said.
"I invested 21 months of my life in this effort — I want to see it through to fruition," Mr. Cooper added.
Gardening that sees your efforts rewarded with organic food as fresh as the time it takes you to get it to the plate, and food that you have nurtured from seed right through to fruition.
Mr Gates has invested in a pioneering reactor fuelled by nuclear waste, while Mr Allen has a stake in a firm working on nuclear fusion".I'm trying to be a catalyst in all these different areas, looking over the horizon to see where things are going and pushing them through to fruition," he says.
Yet much of the criticism of the report has been sharpened by the fact that Carter will not see any of the consultations through to fruition as he is leaving Ofcom at the end of July - an announcement that was made the day before the report was unveiled.
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It begins and ends with the reaffirmation that seeing full LGBTQ workplace equality through to complete fruition is just plain good for business.
The setbacks are all the more startling because Mr. Pataki was once such a dominating part of state politics that there was little he could not get through the Legislature or force to come to fruition through administrative acts.
This might give VCs reason to cheer, except that the tax is so low that pretty much every business in the U.S. would restructure itself into a pass-through business if it came to fruition, quickly destroying the economy.
The agenda of "Victorian values" that Margaret Thatcher so readily propounded is actually only now coming to fruition through the actions of her acolytes.
But the lesson of September the eleventh is, is when the President sees a threat we must deal with it before it comes to fruition, through death, on our own soils, for example".
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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