Being an earth sign, he is willing to focus on the long term and whatever he began nine years ago should now come to fruition. |
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With Purim right around the corner, I hoped that this year those words would finally come to fruition. |
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I truly believe that a country where the people hold steadfast to their dreams will some day see them come to fruition. |
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For it is clear that should these ambitious plans come to fruition, then what emerges will be nothing like a hospital as we know it. |
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It was their just reward last week to see the fruits of their labour come to fruition and be recognised. |
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Through their efforts, many new initiatives have come to fruition, programs that will benefit the membership in these challenging times. |
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The price could actually swell to 415 millions smackers if certain team performance incentives come to fruition in the next few years. |
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New concepts could take months or even years to come to fruition before the finished work was discussed and explained to the family. |
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The owner of the yawl, was on hand to see it begin its journey and was delighted to see the project come to fruition. |
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It is also my intention that support materials, both in writing and on DVD or videotape will come to fruition as a result of this annual event. |
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The end result of this motion if it were to come to fruition would be for naught because these sections no longer apply. |
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We hope that this will actually come to fruition rather than simply remaining an announcement. |
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Apple's long-awaited television offering may come to fruition. Meanwhile, online video is getting slicker and less short-form. |
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Many of your more bizarre or outlandish schemes will come to fruition. |
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These justifications are, we believe, dangerous because they rely on a promise that is unlikely to ever come to fruition. |
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The initiatives taken in the past, well before you talked of retirement, can continue to come to fruition. |
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Her mother had a musical theater background, so Malone grew up backstage, watching productions come to fruition. |
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This period is likely to be radically shortened, however, if certain countries' nuclear power plant construction plans come to fruition. |
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Freedom and grace come to fruition in the spiritual order which defies any merely temporal assessment. |
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Monitoring operations has suddenly become more extensive in an area where the operator's skills may come to fruition. |
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This project, however, may not come to fruition, at least in the short term, because of technical and financial considerations. |
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The year under review shows that the setting of new strategic directions and the implemented measures have come to fruition in the last years. |
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Her major gratifications were seeing the many social services she was instrumental in initiating come to fruition, among them day care for senior citizens. |
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For these ideas to come to fruition, African countries themselves have to make the effort towards good governance. |
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I'd been persecuted by the police for championing the antiapartheid movement and now they were stopping me seeing it come to fruition. |
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It has now been concluded, on our side and on their side, that that project to seize power and overthrow the Government cannot and will not come to fruition. |
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As many of you know, John Ralston Saul was instrumental in encouraging the Aberdeen Cultural Centre to have this festival and it is our joy to see that it has come to fruition in such an ample and fecund state. |
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Should this initiative come to fruition, it will be a tangible result of the provincial government's commitment to protecting and managing the river in perpetuity. |
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The people of York promise to accept her as their overlord, but she dies before this could come to fruition. |
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Over the years, numerous proposals for the former site of the palace have not come to fruition. |
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The plan did not come to fruition, with government officials concluding that the organisation lacked the experience necessary to be viable. |
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Had this plan come to fruition, the territory of the present Lower Saxony would have consisted of three states of roughly equal size. |
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Without this system in place, it is unlikely such an arrangement would have come to fruition. |
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The report recommended a covenant for the Anglican Communion, an idea that did not come to fruition. |
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Some criminal codes criminalize association with a criminal venture or involvement in criminality that does not actually come to fruition. |
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In 1956 the County Council made a proposal to demolish the bridge and replace it with a new one, but this plan did not come to fruition. |
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We are looking at other sites throughout the Republic of Ireland and hopefully they will come to fruition in the near future. |
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My role is very rewarding because a lot of my deliverables are end-to-end, so I can see the results of my work and really feel a sense of accomplishment in seeing my ideas come to fruition. |
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They're just beginning to come to fruition. |
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Three years later, it has come to fruition. |
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We continue to see promises made in stimulus packages, in budgets, in all of these declarations by a government that never actually come to fruition. |
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Right now, in Abuja, the peace process has recently gained momentum and we have a very few short hours left to find out whether this peace process will come to fruition. |
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We accomplished all our goals for this year, added and completed some new projects and advanced the start of others that are still to come to fruition. |
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A third example has come to fruition since the report went to press. |
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These particular showcases have largely come to fruition as the result of leadership by champions who are exploring new ways to improve overall energy performance in communities. |
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This past year, we saw our main objective come to fruition, the adoption by the United Nations General Assembly of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. |
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He congratulated the Committee for its role in the Middle East peace process, and expressed the hope that its plan to hold a trilateral conference in the region in the autumn would come to fruition. |
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I am confident that, under your able and skilled stewardship, the deliberations of the Commission will come to fruition and produce effective results. |
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Can you imagine a role for you in helping the Plan come to fruition? |
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Progress on the scheme was slow and in 1861 Prince Albert died, without having seen his ideas come to fruition. |
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This is a time of rich culinary potential, as the tapering off of some fine sunshine crops overlaps with the nascence of many others that come to fruition in the shortening days. |
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In the 80's, I worked on a project to renovate antique chairs with extravagant fabrics but it didn't come to fruition despite the training I'd had with an upholsterer. |
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His theory did not come to fruition because of the USSR's collapse. |
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And in fact, if all those cornucopian prospects come to fruition, rationing of fossil fuels and probably other resources will become even more essential. |
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The Air Austral's proposed 840 passenger layout has not come to fruition. |
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Aproject involving shipping containers, the BBC and communities across the North East will come to fruition on Good Friday, making it memorable for more than hot cross buns. |
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