Fructify

Fructify

Fructify


FRUK-tih-fy

Definition

(verb) To bear fruit or become productive; to make fruitful or productive

Example

Years of patient investment in the community finally began to fructify, with new businesses and gathering spaces opening across the neighborhood.

Word Origin

Fructify derives from the Latin fructificare — from fructus (“fruit”) + facere (“to make”). It entered English in the 14th century, used first in its literal agricultural sense before quickly extending to describe any endeavor that yields results after a period of cultivation and patience.

Fun Fact

Fructify shares its Latin root fructus with a surprisingly wide family of English words — fruit, frugal, and usufruct (a legal term for the right to use and enjoy another’s property) all trace back to the same source. The root itself derives from frui, meaning “to enjoy” — suggesting that in ancient Roman thinking, fruit was not just a product but a pleasure, something to be savored as much as harvested. The word fructify thus carries within it a sense not just of productivity but of ripening into something worth enjoying.

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Dilatory

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