fruition如何读

英:[fruˈɪʃn]

美:[fruˈɪʃən]

fruition是什么意思

  • n.取得成果;成就;实现;完成

fruition自然拼读

fru·i·tion

fru I shn

fruition词根

词根:fruit

adj.

fruitful 富有成效的;多产的;果实结得多的

fruitless 不成功的,徒劳的;不结果实的

fruity 圆润的;有果味的;果实状的

n.

fruit 水果;产物

fruitage 果实;结果实;[食品] 水果;成果

fruitfulness 丰收,丰硕;多实,肥沃

fruitlet 小水果;小果实

vi.

fruit 结果实

vt.

fruit 使……结果实

fruition英英释义

Noun

1. the condition of bearing fruit

2. enjoyment derived from use or possession

3. something that is made real or concrete;

"the victory was the realization of a whole year's work"

fruition词组

come to fruition实现;成熟 

fruition词源中文解释

15世纪早期,“享受的行为”,源自古法语 fruition,直接源自晚期拉丁语 fruitionem(主格 fruitio)“享受”,是拉丁语 frui “使用,享受”的动词的名词形式(来自 PIE 词根 *bhrug- “享受”)。与 fruit(名词)相关联的“结果或状态的产生”,虽然被词典编辑抵制,但自1885年以来已有证据,这个意义上的比喻来自1889年。

fruition词源英文解释

Middle English fruicioun, fruicion "use, enjoyment, joy felt in mystical communion with God," borrowed from Middle French & Late Latin; Middle French fruicion, fruition, borrowed from Late Latin fruitiōn-, fruitiō "use, enjoyment," from Latin fruor, fruī "to enjoy the produce or proceeds of, derive advantage from, be blessed with, derive pleasure from" + -tiōn-, -tiō, suffix of verbal action — more at fruit >entry 1 Note: Sense 2 reflects reanalysis of the word as a process noun from fruit >entry 1/fruit >entry 2. This usage is not uncommon in the nineteenth century, but was slow to be recognized in dictionaries. Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language (1890) does not recognize it in its definition of fruition ("use or possession of anything, especially such as is accompanied with pleasure or satisfaction"), but nonetheless uses it in its definition of fruit as a verb: "to bear or produce fruit; to come to fruition." The Century Dictionary (1889-91) more or less accurately defines the new sense ("a coming into fruit or fulfilment; attainment of anything desired; realization of results"), while exemplifying it with quotes from seventeenth-century authors (Francis Quarles, Thomas Browne, James Howell) that illustrate only the traditional sense.

The first known use of fruition was in the 15th century

fruition儿童词典英英释义

fruityadjective

relating to or suggesting fruit

a fruity smell

fruit1 of 2noun

a usually useful product of plant growth (as grain)

fruits of the earth

a product of fertilization in a plant with its coverings or associated partsespecially: the ripened ovary of a seed plant (as the pod of a pea, a nut, a grain, or a berry) with or without the attached parts

the ripened ovary of a seed plant (as an apple or raspberry) when sweet and pulpy

a juicy plant part (as the stalk of a rhubarb) used chiefly as a dessert

result entry 2 sense 1, product

the fruits of our labors

fruit2 of 2verb

to bear or cause to bear fruit

fruitlessadjective

not bearing fruit

producing no good results : unsuccessful

a fruitless attempt

fruitlessadjective

not bearing fruit

producing no good results : unsuccessful

a fruitless attempt

fruitionnoun

the state of bearing fruit

the state of being real or complete : realization, accomplishment

brought her dreams to fruition

fruition 例句

1 He pursued this project for 19 years and brought it to fruition in the 1940s while working at the Bell Aircraft Corporation.

2 This pause presented something unexpected which helped the show come to fruition: time to perfect the multiyear, labor-intensive undertakings, which take eight to 10 hours to design and paint per square foot.

3 A good example is Amareswar Galla, executive director of the International Institute for the Inclusive Museum, who nurtured this initiative from concept to fruition.

4 "It's been an interesting and long process developing this and it feels so rewarding and exciting that it's coming to fruition," said the 33-year-old actress in a recent interview.

5 For Oudolf, all this is the fruition of a plant world he has been pushing for almost half a century, though each project is unique in its plantings.

6 But how these tantalizing details come to fruition are another story . . . or, more precisely, two more volumes of a Smiley trilogy.

7 After their first meeting, Druyan and Sagan collaborated for several years on an educational television series, sort of a "Cosmos" for kids, that never came to fruition.

8 “But the sheer scale of the final season is massive. Big characters who have been kept separate all arrive in Winterfell. Storylines converge and come to fruition.”

9 The plot never came close to fruition and no aircraft was in danger, officials said.

10 I've learnt enough about show business to know that most ideas never come to fruition.

11 But he had to be practical—she likely had just wanted to have an impassioned discussion about the evils of arranged marriages and controlling parents and was disappointed it wasn’t coming to fruition.

12 “He’s the one who brought everything to fruition.”

13 He wasn't sure what he had until he borrowed a friend's reel-to-reel player and listened to the recording of his father interviewing King for a book project that never came to fruition.

14 “It’s new and old at the same time,” he says, “from its appearance to the principles that brought it to fruition.”

15 What's challenging is figuring out how to bring a software product to fruition.

困难的部分在于想出如何使一个软件产品获得成功。

16 But without a talented filmmaker to guide the project to fruition, even the best actors are little more than ghosts in the machine.

17 If the plans we were making came to fruition, all my dreams would come true.

18 Time has passed, and we have stepped over the ruins of our own societies, and our own civilisations, and we come now to the fruition of those things about which the human race has dreamed.

19 Akhi and I were working hard to bring his goal of turning me into one of the best fencers in the world to fruition.

20 Anchor Brewing said that despite repeated efforts to find buyers for the brewery and its brands, none had come to fruition.

fruition 同义词

3 取得成果

bear fruit

10 享用

take

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