materialize
UK: məˈtɪəriəlaɪz | US: məˈtɪriəlaɪz
vi. to become actual or real; to appear suddenly
vt. to give material form to something; to make physically perceptible
The word "materialize" combines "material," derived from Latin materia (meaning "matter" or "substance"), with the verb-forming suffix "-ize," from Greek -izein. Originally used in philosophical contexts to describe the manifestation of ideas into physical form, it later expanded to general usage for anything becoming tangible or appearing suddenly. The logic follows the transformation from abstract (idea) to concrete (reality).
The ghost seemed to materialize out of thin air.
Her dreams finally materialized after years of hard work.
Scientists are trying to materialize theoretical concepts into practical inventions.
The solution materialized during their brainstorming session.
Fear can materialize as physical symptoms in stressful situations.