释义 |
fecundfec‧und /ˈfekənd, ˈfiːkənd/ adjective formal  fecundOrigin: 1300-1400 French fécond, from Latin fecundus - And its business, of course, at this fecund point of the year, was that of survival - survival and reproduction.
- Certain questions were asked only of currently married fecund women.
- Indeed, many of the women were unusually fecund.
- One of these was the forceful Bantam, pre-eminent among the fecund Marshend females.
- The result was that Dahomean kings were very fecund, while ordinary Dahomean men were often celibate and barren.
- The ultimate evolutionary victory, on the theistic hypothesis, does not go to the most ruthless exterminators and most fecund replicators.
- You can smell the fecund rot of the jungle in every headline.
able to produce many children, young animals, or crops SYN fertile—fecundity /fɪˈkʌndəti/ noun [uncountable] |