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Definitions

fruitage

[froo-tij] / ˈfru tɪdʒ /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But if religion is to have its full value as a 'last resort' in times of peril or affliction, it must have deep rootage, broad leafage and ample fruitage in the normal circumstances of life.

From Time Magazine Archive

Every plant and every animal is but the fruitage of the inherent life that pervades the material world.

From Nature and Culture by Rice, Harvey

In truth this affinity of Lincoln with his neighbor in need was the very fruitage of the fortune of his life.

From Abraham Lincoln's Cardinal Traits; A Study in Ethics, with an Epilogue Addressed to Theologians by Beardslee, Clark S.

To each ascending form there is an endowment of self-perpetuation by parentage and seed fruitage, which involve the electro-magnetic condition of germ life.

From The Universe a Vast Electric Organism by Warder, George Woodward

The whole life and evolution of character in a person, if graphically drawn, reveal the principles of conduct and their fruitage.

From Special Method in the Reading of Complete English Classics In the Grades of the Common School by McMurry, Charles A. (Charles Alexander)