A garden that is neglected does not so much cease to bear fruit, as it loses its shape and form. |
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Eventually stuff might start turning up unbidden, but I suspect the direct ask will bear fruit sooner. |
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They analyse trends and predict the future before making commitments that might not bear fruit for many years. |
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The channel's viewership is ageing, and attempts to attract younger watchers have yet to bear fruit. |
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Hawass says global efforts to stem illicit trade in antiquities are starting to bear fruit. |
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The fight will not bear fruit if it assumes the preserve of emotionalism and unbridled hatred or preformed conclusions and judgments. |
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Renowned for its longevity, a gnarled, twisted olive tree can bear fruit for several hundred years. |
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With these measures in place, we are optimistic that initiatives to control youth degeneration would begin to bear fruit. |
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The farther the fruiting canes are from the main stem, the less likely they are to bear fruit. |
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In their first season they flattered to deceive but in their second the regime started to bear fruit. |
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Inventor 11 might just be a milestone for Autodesk, where the promises and potential of a system finally start to bear fruit. |
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Indeed, we hope that the agreement between the UPDF, the Sudan People's Liberation Army and the Sudanese army will bear fruit in the near future. |
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That doesn't mean procrastinating on urgent issues. Nor is it a justification for delaying efforts that may take years to bear fruit. |
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The sovereign dynasty of Grimaldi for 700 years has known to emphasize this territory, with the exiguous departure, and to make it bear fruit. |
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The lemon tree didn't bear fruit, so he tied lemons to the branches. |
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But a special effort will be required if lay preaching is to bear fruit. |
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It is difficult to believe that such considerations will bear fruit, however, meaning that forced deportations and prisons for deportees will receive approval. |
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Every time my gooseberry bush starts to bear fruit, it develops a fungus. |
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People need nutrients in food to grow strong and healthy, and plants need nutrients in soil to grow strong and bear fruit. |
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God is constrained so to act as to keep in view the accumulated karma of individuals, yet to bear fruit. |
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They can begin to bear fruit within just four years, and continue to do so for around 25 years. |
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Attempts to improve security by making it more difficult to bring weapons on base may bear fruit but face substantial hurdles. |
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All those efforts are great, and many of them are likely to bear fruit in the long-term. |
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Gradualness and continuity in the formation journey are difficult to achieve and to make bear fruit. |
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He really went everywhere, untiringly, in order to bear fruit, fruit that lasts. |
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This was a seed that would lie dormant for awhile, but that would one day bear fruit. |
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Implementation, albeit partially, of the reforms under the Lisbon strategy seems to be starting to bear fruit as regards employment. |
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The only thing I cannot accept is that this research will not bear fruit for a very long time. |
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There is also greater political will for this kind of cooperation, and I am confident that it will bear fruit, because it is necessary. |
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This year, many of our collaborative projects in child and youth health are beginning to bear fruit. |
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We very much hope that those diplomatic efforts will bear fruit as soon as possible. |
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For experiments such as these to bear fruit, they need to be encouraged on a scale large enough to have an appreciable impact on air quality. |
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The range of products for export, which has been focussed increasingly on the Emmi brand over the last year, has started to bear fruit. |
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In the drive to modernise the armed forces, some defence projects will bear fruit whereas many others will be delayed. |
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I ask all of you to render your wholehearted support to ensure that our common efforts do bear fruit. |
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Time must be allowed for these initiatives to bear fruit before any other major change is envisaged. |
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The seed sown in this Conference will grow in their hearts and bear fruit, because the future belongs to them. |
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The move towards more visible use of the Emmi brand in the export range, which was initiated last year, has now started to bear fruit. |
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We are particularly grateful to Egypt for its tireless efforts, which we hope will swiftly bear fruit. |
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A sizable crowd turned out in glorious weather conditions to pay their compliments to the small band of volunteers who had seen the six-year project bear fruit. |
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Lately, however, some observations have begun to bear fruit. Macho or wimp The candidates for dark matter come in two basic sorts: largish chunks, or darting, sub-atomic particles in unimaginable abundance. |
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Is the implementation of a broader political process not the only solution that could bear fruit, restore peace and bring about a solution to the conflict? |
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Although Samuel Taylor Coleridge had also been a proponent of Schiller, Carlyle's efforts on behalf of Schiller and Goethe would bear fruit. |
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It will be followed by a Jounal No 3 which will try to see how to act: small actions are organised here and there and we hope they will bear fruit. |
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The do-or-die move had paid off for the Belgians as they squeezed past Boomerang Interviú to reach the final, but it failed to bear fruit for the Russians. |
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He shall rebuke the devourer for me so that he will not destroy the fruits of my ground, nor shall the vine fail to bear fruit for me in the field. |
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A new request made at the Tenth Conference, in 1954, did not bear fruit. |
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Before the birth of his first child, legal expert Daniele Fumagalli felt the need to do something that would bear fruit in the long term and grow with his family. |
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This familiar image of a grain dying in order to bear fruit evokes the mystery of Jesus who humbly descended to death and was raised in glory, for his passion and death indeed lead to the rich harvest of the resurrection. |
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It is an ambitious undertaking, which is actually starting to bear fruit. |
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Which is not to deny that some government investments can bear fruit. |
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We are certain that with your wise leadership our efforts will bear fruit. |
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But such presumptuousness on the part of mere mortals is possible, and likely to bear fruit, only in communities that have been trained to share and to respect certain moral principles grounded in thoughtfulness. |
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The initiatives they have undertaken are beginning to bear fruit, enabling them to improve their cost structures and recover their ability to bounce back from a commercial standpoint. |
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Thailand therefore calls on all parties concerned to build upon this momentum in order to ensure that our ongoing efforts will eventually bear fruit. |
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In 2006, the spadework laid by ad hoc project-staff started to bear fruit. |
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One consequence of outsiders permeating Whitehall is about to bear fruit. |
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In fact, his assumption of the office of Censor may have been motivated by a desire to see his academic labors bear fruit. |
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The plants bear fruit from the fourth or fifth year, and then typically for seven years. |
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If this research is to bear fruit, it is important to create the right technical conditions for developing the profession of freight integrator, and to standardise loading units. |
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It will take a generation before some of these efforts will bear fruit. |
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The plan presented is based primarily on restructuring measures which have already been in place for a number of years and which are now starting to bear fruit. |
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We admire Secretary Kerry's determined efforts to bring the parties back to the negotiating table, and hope that this new round of talks will indeed bear fruit. |
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Malignant principles bear fruit in kind and the Revolution did no more than practice what men had been taught by the abandoned crew of philosophers. |
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Sweet potatoes normally flower insummer and bear fruit in late summer and fall, thus providing a source of carotenoids and vitamin A in the fall and winter. |
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They bring forth from the treasury of Revelation new things and old, making it bear fruit and vigilantly warding off any errors that threaten their flock. |
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