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53 Sentences With "bring to fruition"

How to use bring to fruition in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bring to fruition" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bring to fruition". Mastering all the usages of "bring to fruition" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Box is shooting for transformative change, and apparently that takes time to bring to fruition.
It's declarative, and a step into the life the Brooklyn rapper is trying to bring to fruition.
But Price had a plan of his own, one he wants to see Elliot bring to fruition.
Important reforms have begun, but they require ongoing focus and permanent leadership confirmed by the Senate to bring to fruition.
Ms Suu Kyi's imperiousness has only harmed a "peace process" with armed groups that she once promised to bring to fruition.
First up is "Paint Palette" — a colorful, abstract rendering inspired by everything baby will bring to fruition as they discover their own creativity.
Louise Vallario from Lifestyles and I initially collaborated informally to foster the partnership at Empire, which took six months to bring to fruition.
The work of photography duo Kelia Anne and Luca Venter come together to bring to fruition their visually astute series titled Crisis of the Real.
Opponents believe this would set off a new Palestinian uprising, bring to fruition the apartheid regime the Israeli left has long warned against, or both.
Hoffmann says Dunkin' is currently "studying straws," but noting that the company is 100-percent franchised and major changes can take longer to bring to fruition.
And one way to generate that support is to make it as strong and expansive as possible, with the most ambitious policies you can bring to fruition.
"We will get runs on the board, but the real challenge is to bring to fruition the two big animals: one is PIA and the other one is Steel Mills," Aziz said.
Unless King Salman elevates his son to crown prince, it is not clear if Mohammad Bin Nayef will bring to fruition many of the policies that Prince Mohammad Bin Salman has initiated.
When companies do partner with universities, it's often for a limited, product-specific purpose rather than for developing industrywide solutions that take longer to bring to fruition but can create many more jobs.
Pressley's speech, for example, called for ordinary citizens to organize en masse to help bring to fruition a democratic socialist wish list of policies, including a Green New Deal and Medicare-for-all.
The goal here is to bring to fruition this broader vision of what serverless means, where developers can just write code without having to worry about the underlying infrastructure where the program will run.
In ninety seconds he had completed the final stage of the task that had taken a decade and millions of dollars to bring to fruition: getting the heavyweight titles—real or conceptual—back together.
Their version of populism, which Mr. Sanders pioneered but did not bring to fruition when he challenged Hillary Clinton in 2016, is about attacking concentrated wealth and economic power and breaking its influence over government.
Aussaguel points out that if you stay within a community of designers like Dribbble, you'll see a lot of mock ups that are impossible — or at least incredibly difficult — to bring to fruition from the developer's side.
Similarly, the story gives relatively short shrift to courtroom jockeying and strategizing -- and the young lawyers who champion their cause, played by Nick Kroll and Jon Bass -- making the Lovings rather passive vessels for the change they helped bring to fruition.
The sole focus of Trump's supporters is WIIFM, and as long as they perceive that Trump can bring to fruition policies that address their particular needs and goals, they'll continue to give him their unwavering support - which will continue to frustrate his adversaries.
But all Welles can do is open another portal, this time into the life of the book's protagonist, the displaced Cypriot and possible double agent Vettor Crivano, as he moves around Venice in 1592 trying to bring to fruition a complex plot involving mirror-makers and alchemists.
But Sanders just hasn't been able to bring to fruition his promise to grow the electorate of young voters — among 12 states that voted prior to Tuesday night's contests, young voters' share of the electorate in 11 of those states actually decreased from 2016 to 2020.
From the perspective of a Dota die-hard, teams like Cloud9 and owners like Jack Etienne are hardly disinterested observers, and they represent less an inevitable evolution for competitive gaming than a corporate vision that lots of monied investors and hopeful team owners want to bring to fruition.
Dr. Rosenberg, Dr. Carl H. June of the University of Pennsylvania and Dr. Michel Sadelain of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center have been at the forefront of this research for decades, laboring in separate labs in an intense sometimes-cooperative, sometimes-competitive pursuit to bring to fruition a daring therapy that few colleagues believed would work.
I'm sure I'm not the only one of us who thinks up a "great idea for a puzzle" every so often and never follows through, so I experience envy and admiration while solving — and also a sense that whatever I'm working on was that idea that was too fun or too good to not bring to fruition.
Its purchase almost certainly enabled him to complete the enclosure process and to bring to fruition his family's long-term plans to make it a closed parish and classic estate village.
In October 2016 it was announced that Hancock Prospecting had struck a deal to invest in AIM listed UK-based mining company Sirius Minerals to help bring to fruition their North Yorkshire Polyhalite Project.
Through his factory, he wanted to bring to fruition the ideas of Justus von Liebig. He particularly pointed to the use of bone meal produced by him. It was an organic fertilizer rich in lime, nitrogen and phosphoric acid.
2 p. 10) that stated the need to investigate how to bring to fruition the plan for a Manhattan eruv. On July 12, 1961, Rabbi Henkin wrote a letter stating that there was a sound basis to establish an eruv in Manhattan.(ibid., pp. 14–15; Hapardes 36th year, vol.
The Nazi Party took control of Germany in 1933, causing a dramatic change of idealism. This change was not just social; in fact, Adolf Hitler had planned the complete renovation of the city of Berlin. "Welthauptstadt Germania", or World Capital Germania, was the idea the Nazis wanted to bring to fruition. The Tiergarten was to be a central location in the new city.
After his father gave him a copy of Pollock's biography, he started thinking about the project, which took almost 10 years to bring to fruition. Filming took a mere 50 days with a six-week layoff after forty days so Harris could take time to gain thirty pounds and grow a beard.Interview with Ed Harris at DVDtalk Harris himself did all the painting seen in the film.
In interviews Green has described Holliston as his "most passionate of passion projects" and explained that the show took him over 13 years to bring to fruition. After the 2014 death of cast member Dave Brockie and the dissolving of FEARnet just a few weeks later, Holliston went on an indefinite hiatus. In July 2015, Entertainment Weekly announced that "Holliston" would return with a third season.
His Messages in Bottles relied on chance and the collaboration of strangers to bring to fruition. His experimental "Sculptography" collaboration with photographer, Miss Aniela, is a further example of his experimental work, as is his "Scanography" series. In addition he is frequently commissioned to create one-off designs of furniture etc. for business and private clients, with the help of a large team of student volunteers under his name.
Fray Mountain was discovered by John (Jack) Falconer Fisher in 1937/38. When Jack was a young man of 16, he earned his pilots license. He would fly over mountains, sculpting trails in his mind as he had a vision of creating either a golf course or a ski area. Jack was from nearby Salisbury, CT and had helped bring to fruition, Lime Rock Race Track and the Salisbury Ski Jump.
Recent empirical literature on folk psychology has shown that people's theories regarding intentional actions involve four distinct factors: beliefs, desires, causal histories, and enabling factors. Here, beliefs and desires represent the central variables responsible for the folk theories of intention. Desires embody outcomes that an individual seeks, including those that are impossible to achieve. The key difference between desires and intentions is that desires can be purely hypothetical, whereas intentions specify an outcome that the individual is actually trying to bring to fruition.
The development of the first movement contains a complex network of leitmotifs that Richard Wagner would similarly bring to fruition in his work Der Ring des Nibelungen (popularly known as the Ring Cycle).Rosen (1995), pp. 467-469 The second movement of Erik Satie's Embryons desséchés, entitled "of an Edriophthalma", uses a variation on the Marche funèbre's second theme. Satie labels it "Citation de la célèbre mazurka de SCHUBERT" ("quotation from the celebrated mazurka of Schubert"), but no such piece exists.Potter (2016), pp.
In 2008, an Options Appraisal study was undertaken by Govan Workspace Ltd, who then took the lead in applying for funding to redisplay the sculpture. The funding was secured in 2011, allowing the redisplay to be completed by Northlight Heritage/York Archaeological Trust in 2013. Govan Old's future was secured when the Govan Heritage Trust obtained a grant from the Scottish Government in 2016. The Trust aims to develop the church into a self- sustaining community-run cultural, museum and business complex but requires further financial support from the community to bring to fruition.
However, she permanently loses contact with her spirit guide Louise, who sacrifices her connection to Sylvia in order to save her and Nick in the process. The two return to their hotel, battered and bruised but thankful that they played a part in releasing a dangerous force. Later that night they reconvene in Sylvia's room and bring to fruition a romantic flirtation that has permeated the film. Before they can make love, however, Sylvia hits her head on the headboard and reveals that a spirit guide has re- entered her life.
After leaving Continuum, Long served for four years as the CEO of WebMD. Long sought to bring to fruition the "dream" of WebMD serving as a network that would link "patients, hospitals, doctors, insurance companies, and pharmacies that would help manage people's health care throughout their lives." Long envisioned cutting $300 billion in waste from the health care industry, but what Long "saw as waste others saw as income." WebMD would meet a lot of resistance from the health care industry, never able to fulfill the vision Long had set out for it.
The DragonCrown War Cycle is a four book fantasy series consisting of a prequel, The Dark Glory War, and three main volumes, Fortress Draconis, When Dragons Rage, and The Grand Crusade. The books were written by Michael A. Stackpole and published by Bantam Spectra, a subsidiary of Randomhouse inc. over the course of 4 years from 2000-2003. The books follow a group of heroes as they struggle to bring to fruition the Norrington Prophecy, so that they can defeat the evil Queen of the north, Chytrine, and save the southern kingdoms from destruction.
An H39 at Saumur; this vehicle has been modified by the Germans who fitted a cupola hatch As the Cavalry wanted an even better top speed, it was decided to bring to fruition experiments already conducted from October 1936 to install a more powerful engine. A new prototype was built in 1937, with a 120 hp instead of a 78 hp engine. The hull was enlarged, giving it a higher almost level engine deck, to accommodate it. The track and the suspension elements were improved, raising the weight to .
If you didn't know that it has been decked out after the American paradigm, you might suppose that you were being confronted with an entirely new style. This is something genuinely new for Berlin, and one must give Oskar Kaufmann his due, for he has understood how to bring to fruition something outstanding and appropriate to its purpose. The room, decorated in ivory colours, is completely carpeted in grey plush, against which the lilac folding seats are advantageously silhouetted. The ceiling gravitates downwards towards sumptuous, multi-coloured relief arabesques, and the light fixtures are of outstanding beauty.
He examined it attentively, conducted an investigation, perceived it was not unworthy of him, and determined to dress it in modern clothes. "What specially pleases me in this little work," said Haydn, "is the melody, and certain youthful fire, and this stirs me to write down several measures a day in order to provide the voices with a wind-instrument accompaniment." Because of his illness Haydn was unable to bring to fruition his effort to provide wind parts; however, some other composer, thought to be Joseph Heidenreich,Dack (2009). Geiringer (1947) earlier attributed the wind parts to Pietro Polzelli.
During her 23-year tenure on the Colorado Supreme Court, Mullarkey heard more than 300,000 cases and authored 472 opinions. She helped to increase Colorado's number of judges by 27 percent, remodel courthouses, institute judicial training and juror appreciation programs, and turn Colorado's judicial system into a national technological model. Mullarkey instituted a rule that all court buildings must have child waiting rooms providing children with a safe place to stay during parents' court appearances. Prior to retiring, Mullarkey worked to bring to fruition the state-of-the-art Ralph L. Carr Colorado Judicial Center in Denver.
The easy life he had spoken of to Northcote had largely vanished by the time that conversation was published about a year before his death. By then he was overwhelmed by the degradation of poverty, frequent bouts of physical as well as mental illness—depressionMaclean writes of "the blighting effect of the melancholy which had by this time had become habitual with Hazlitt", p. 538. caused by his failure to find true love and by his inability to bring to fruition his defence of the man he worshipped as a hero of liberty and fighter of despotism.
Most of his published scholarship accordingly appeared posthumously, edited by his colleagues and students. Nonetheless, during his lifetime Maule was the editor, with his colleague Adrian Poole, of the Oxford Book of Classical Verse in Translation (1995). Following his early death a bequest from Maule's will also helped bring to fruition a project he had long cherished: the creation of Renaissance Texts from Manuscript (RTM), a scholarly press for the publication of unprinted sixteenth- and seventeenth- century manuscripts. Four volumes appeared, under the general editorship of Marie Axton, on subjects as diverse as dance, female (auto)biography, and rhetoric, reflecting Maule's own multifarious interests and exacting qualities as an editor.
After the Chicago fair closed, Douglass bought the hundred slot phonographs and secured a concession for the 1894 Midwinter Fair in San Francisco; this concession and the phonographs were ultimately taken over by Bacigalupi, who then used the machines to open a phonograph arcade on Market Street. One business opportunity that Douglass was unable to bring to fruition was a contract to exhibit Thomas Edison’s kinetoscope at the World’s Fair. This would have been the first public exhibition of moving pictures, but Edison objected to a clause in the fair contract requiring a bond guaranteeing that the exhibit would be ready by the opening of the fair.
This probability, or rather certainty of discovery, is a distinguished and powerful gentleman in Colombia, South America, it is believed able to bring to fruition, and if success crowns his efforts, there will be universal in the fair reflective telescope such power, that all known until now seem little more than simple binoculars. Mr. Carlos Alban, Colombia, is the sorcerer who attempts to produce these wonders, who is currently in Washington conferring with scientists and officials on how best to proceed. Dr. Alban has been attorney general of Colombia and is known as a remarkable scientific man. His plan embraces the principle of telescope reflective glass with several radical changes in old methods.
After four years in private practice, Price was elected in 1974 as judge of the Dallas County Criminal Court No. 5 and served for three four-year terms, during part of which he was the presiding judge of the court. In 1986, 1990, and 1994, he was elected to the 282nd Criminal District Court, of which he was also the presiding judge. From 1991 to 1996, he was the chairman of the Community Justice Council Committee, in which capacity he was instrumental in the site selection, building, and administration of the Dallas County State Jail Facility, the largest institution of its kind in the state. Similarly, he worked to bring to fruition the Dallas County Judicial Drug Treatment Center.
In the 1980s, Eastman and Beverly Social Studies Coordinator Anthony Witwicki shared a vision of a social studies lab: a room set up on the same principles as a science or language lab, and a place where students could get hands-on training. A stipend of $15,000 that Eastman received as a recipient of the Massachusetts Christa McAuliffe Fellowship helped bring to fruition the social studies lab vision he shared with Witwicki. With the help of archaeologist Steven Pendery, Eastman created an interdisciplinary Archaeology course that included a first-of-its-kind 20x15 foot field training "sand box" with 3,000 artifacts buried in four levels representing periods in American history - late Woodland, Colonial, Victorian, and Modern-Day. The course included a classroom laboratory for artifact analysis and cataloging.
The laugh is on those who, burdened with pretensions of > truth, believe they can fathom within 15 minutes of human existence what has > transpired over eons of space and time in this Universe . So, I extol the > intuitions encapsulated in the folds of my mind from whence occasionally > they hurtle to the forebrain and in a twinkling of a proton’s discharge > bring to fruition a thought, an idea borne on the feathery appendages of > teeming neurons wedded in a seamless synergy. Those fleeting moments are > cherished as are those precious impulses imparted by the innumerable > individuals who nurtured and instilled unknowingly their encrypted thoughts > in mine. So, with these fanciful thoughts in mind I give praise to you - my > friends, my colleagues, my soul-mates, my loved ones - for letting my soul > and thoughts meander hither and yonder in this attempt at philosophy and > poetry.
The sites are also evidence late nineteenth century colonisation activities by private individuals, in this case the Marquis de Ray expedition. The sites are significant as part of a settlement that was discussed as a model for the establishment of other colonies in New South Wales The place has a strong or special association with a person, or group of persons, of importance of cultural or natural history of New South Wales's history. The sites are significant for their local association with pioneer settler Giacomo Picolli who reflects some of those tenacious and persistent qualities, particularly evident in his sericulture activities, of those earliest settlers, as well his wider advocacy of the Italian heritage of the area through his establishment of the first Park of Peace. They also have association with Dr Florian Volpato, an agent of the Italian consul on the North Coast and a successful businessman was able to organise and mobilise people and generate funds to bring to fruition the wider Italian community's vision for a monument to the pioneers of the area.

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