0 the time when a plan or an idea really begins to happen, exist, or be successful -- gerçekleşme, muradına erme, başarılı olma
The plan never really came to fruition.
Sound fruition requires a further processing step, which accounts for sound propagation in enclosures and for the listener's position relative to the sound source.
I then describe outstanding problems that must be solved for the techniques outlined herein to come to fruition.
We have argued that for health promotion to come to fruition in a primary health care setting it must have a solid foundation.
What cannot be gainsaid is that nature safeguards certain principles that must be respected no matter in which discipline they come to fruition.
These, in fact, besides determining contexts and ways of fruition, go as far to re-modulate the 'nature' of cognitive environments.
Nevertheless, with the adaptive refinement advancing, the higher-order accuracy comes to fruition.
It is an honor to bring to fruition this special experiment.
Perhaps the developmental seeds that the government's music policy had planted in the 1980s were coming to fruition in the 1990s.