The plural of fruition; plural instances of something coming to completion or being achieved; the fulfillment of hopes or plans.
From Old French 'fruition,' Latin 'fruitio' (enjoyment), root 'frui' (to enjoy). The word shifted from meaning 'enjoyment' to 'the achievement that brings enjoyment,' and is now primarily used as an uncountable noun.
It's odd that 'fruitions' exists but sounds wrong—we almost never pluralize 'fruition.' This is because the word moved from countable to abstract, and when a word shifts categories in English, the old forms linger as ghosts in the grammar.
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