| 释义 | 
		Definition of fructify in English: fructifyverbfructifies, fructifying, fructified ˈfrʌktɪfʌɪˈfrəktəˌfaɪ [with object]formal 1Make (something) fruitful or productive.  they were sacrificed in order that their blood might fructify the crops  Example sentencesExamples -  But if our wisdom includes the supersensible life in the background, we perceive the one fructifying the other, the one enclosed within the other.
 -  The students are at the helm of activities right from obtaining permission to utilise ‘poromboke’ land in the villages and raising funds from philanthropists to fructify asset creation.
 -  Thence it fructified the economy of China's centres of silk and tea production in the lower Yangzi provinces.
 -  I decided to fructify this one for the sole reason that it didn't require another person to do it.
 -  The districts at the extremities of the country are Nephthys, and Anubis accordingly is the son of the Nile, which by its inundation has fructified a distant part of the country.
 
  Synonyms add fertilizer to, enrich with fertilizer, feed, mulch, compost, manure, dung, dress, top-dress pollinate, cross-pollinate, cross-fertilize, make fruitful - 1.1no object Bear fruit or become productive.
 it fructified like vegetation in steamy heat  Example sentencesExamples -  However, in the tropical rain forests, some tall arbor plants, also die away after they blossom and fructify one time; and this is little known to common people.
 -  Investigations occasionally fructify, although they always take time.
 -  However, these rag-pickers soon realise than their dreams can only fructify if they get monetary support from the elite.
 -  However, this failed to fructify because of the complex licensing procedures of the U.S. Department of State, which regulates the export of satellites and related systems and components.
 -  The next step however, took yet another decade to fructify.
 -  Gandhi's dream of non-violent world-order can not fructify unless there is a qualitative transformation of leaders of nations and peoples.
 -  It may be noted that in this case, there is full performance risk - the airline has to exist, operate, achieve ticket sales and collect successfully for the cashflows to fructify.
 -  The plant fructifies during the June-to-September season.
 -  The end of the Order, in all branches, is a contemplation that fructifies in the apostolate.
 -  Even if it does, whenever it may be, it will take at least five years to fructify.
 -  The idea never died and it has fructified to become the new museum.
 -  What force prevents the terrorist conspiracy from fructifying?
 -  And this idealist struggle will continue and take many more years to fructify.
 -  It rarely fructifies but the thallus varies in size, amount of division and cusping as well as colour.
 -  An agreement, for raising plantation around Satuluru station in 15 acres for a 15-year period, is likely to fructify soon.
 -  The government's ambitious project of supplying Cauvery water and laying UGD lines are yet to fructify.
 -  We are happy the government has taken steps for mega infrastructure projects which will fructify ten years later.
 -  Similarly, her concern for the fisherfolk and their fears over the possible loss of livelihood if the canal fructifies may not be misplaced.
 -  For the past couple of days, their visits to the General Post Office, the only place from where the applications could be bought, did not fructify.
 -  The proposal to build the Devanhalli international airport too has taken a long time to fructify and even today the progress is bogged down with some technicalities, though there is no doubt about its becoming a reality before long.
 
  
 
 Origin   Middle English: from Old French fructifier, from Latin fructificare, from fructus 'fruit'.    Definition of fructify in US English: fructifyverbˈfrəktəˌfaɪˈfrəktəˌfī [with object]formal 1Make (something) fruitful or productive.  they were sacrificed in order that their blood might fructify the crops  Example sentencesExamples -  I decided to fructify this one for the sole reason that it didn't require another person to do it.
 -  Thence it fructified the economy of China's centres of silk and tea production in the lower Yangzi provinces.
 -  But if our wisdom includes the supersensible life in the background, we perceive the one fructifying the other, the one enclosed within the other.
 -  The students are at the helm of activities right from obtaining permission to utilise ‘poromboke’ land in the villages and raising funds from philanthropists to fructify asset creation.
 -  The districts at the extremities of the country are Nephthys, and Anubis accordingly is the son of the Nile, which by its inundation has fructified a distant part of the country.
 
  Synonyms add fertilizer to, enrich with fertilizer, feed, mulch, compost, manure, dung, dress, top-dress pollinate, cross-pollinate, cross-fertilize, make fruitful - 1.1no object Bear fruit or become productive.
 it fructified like vegetation in steamy heat  Example sentencesExamples -  For the past couple of days, their visits to the General Post Office, the only place from where the applications could be bought, did not fructify.
 -  The government's ambitious project of supplying Cauvery water and laying UGD lines are yet to fructify.
 -  Similarly, her concern for the fisherfolk and their fears over the possible loss of livelihood if the canal fructifies may not be misplaced.
 -  What force prevents the terrorist conspiracy from fructifying?
 -  However, this failed to fructify because of the complex licensing procedures of the U.S. Department of State, which regulates the export of satellites and related systems and components.
 -  And this idealist struggle will continue and take many more years to fructify.
 -  The proposal to build the Devanhalli international airport too has taken a long time to fructify and even today the progress is bogged down with some technicalities, though there is no doubt about its becoming a reality before long.
 -  However, in the tropical rain forests, some tall arbor plants, also die away after they blossom and fructify one time; and this is little known to common people.
 -  An agreement, for raising plantation around Satuluru station in 15 acres for a 15-year period, is likely to fructify soon.
 -  We are happy the government has taken steps for mega infrastructure projects which will fructify ten years later.
 -  The next step however, took yet another decade to fructify.
 -  The idea never died and it has fructified to become the new museum.
 -  The end of the Order, in all branches, is a contemplation that fructifies in the apostolate.
 -  Investigations occasionally fructify, although they always take time.
 -  Even if it does, whenever it may be, it will take at least five years to fructify.
 -  Gandhi's dream of non-violent world-order can not fructify unless there is a qualitative transformation of leaders of nations and peoples.
 -  The plant fructifies during the June-to-September season.
 -  However, these rag-pickers soon realise than their dreams can only fructify if they get monetary support from the elite.
 -  It rarely fructifies but the thallus varies in size, amount of division and cusping as well as colour.
 -  It may be noted that in this case, there is full performance risk - the airline has to exist, operate, achieve ticket sales and collect successfully for the cashflows to fructify.
 
  
 
 Origin   Middle English: from Old French fructifier, from Latin fructificare, from fructus ‘fruit’.     |