释义 |
Definition of fecundity in English: fecunditynoun fɪˈkʌndɪti mass noun1The ability to produce an abundance of offspring or new growth; fertility. multiply mated females show increased fecundity age-related decline in female fecundity Example sentencesExamples - Food shortage can directly influence seasonal fecundity through reduced clutch or brood size.
- Low fecundity makes bird species vulnerable to decline.
- Indian goat breeds exhibit enormous variations in fecundity; production of meat, milk, and fibre; draughtability; disease resistance; and heat tolerance.
- A strong positive relationship between female body size and fecundity emerged from these data.
- Nutrients such as nitrates and phosphates fuel the extraordinary biological fecundity of the seas there.
- Infection by sporozoites reduces the fecundity of mosquitoes.
- Water availability is an obvious factor affecting the fecundity of cacti.
- In the early decades of the last century birth control was seen as a means of population control essential for limiting the fecundity of the poor.
- The Kala dance features a pot symbolizing fecundity.
- To tribal communities across the world, the tiger is the symbol of prosperity and fecundity and the essence of the feminine force.
- 1.1 The ability to produce many new ideas.
the immense fecundity of his imagination made a profound impact on European literature Example sentencesExamples - She had a seductively energetic and infectious enthusiasm for teaching, and an incomparable fecundity of research ideas.
- While he increasingly retreated after 1867 from politics, his intellectual fecundity remained undiminished.
- For a painter, who can produce storerooms of paintings; for a wordsmith, either novelist or playwright, who can offer a library of texts, fecundity is no problem.
- The subject of the poem is thus fairly straightforward: the creative fecundity of idleness in nature.
- A new book to be published later this month bears witness to this extraordinary intellectual fecundity and entrepreneurial zeal.
- The objections centered on rhetorical claims that the simplicity and uniformity of the new buildings threatened the cultural fecundity of the neighborhood.
- The piece reminds me of another composer in terms of variety of expression and overall musical fecundity.
- The collection of essays exemplifies the diversity and fecundity of medieval rhetorical studies.
- The fecundity of Elizabethan language was an extraordinary phenomenon produced by an extraordinary society.
- What elevates the musician above other electronic artists is the fecundity of his imagination: his resourceful ability to infuse his tracks with a distinctive compositional intelligence and command.
Rhymes jocundity, moribundity, profundity, rotundity, rubicundity Definition of fecundity in US English: fecunditynoun 1The ability to produce an abundance of offspring or new growth; fertility. multiply mated females show increased fecundity age-related decline in female fecundity Example sentencesExamples - The Kala dance features a pot symbolizing fecundity.
- In the early decades of the last century birth control was seen as a means of population control essential for limiting the fecundity of the poor.
- Infection by sporozoites reduces the fecundity of mosquitoes.
- A strong positive relationship between female body size and fecundity emerged from these data.
- Food shortage can directly influence seasonal fecundity through reduced clutch or brood size.
- Nutrients such as nitrates and phosphates fuel the extraordinary biological fecundity of the seas there.
- Water availability is an obvious factor affecting the fecundity of cacti.
- Low fecundity makes bird species vulnerable to decline.
- Indian goat breeds exhibit enormous variations in fecundity; production of meat, milk, and fibre; draughtability; disease resistance; and heat tolerance.
- To tribal communities across the world, the tiger is the symbol of prosperity and fecundity and the essence of the feminine force.
- 1.1 The ability to produce many new ideas.
the immense fecundity of his imagination made a profound impact on European literature Example sentencesExamples - A new book to be published later this month bears witness to this extraordinary intellectual fecundity and entrepreneurial zeal.
- The fecundity of Elizabethan language was an extraordinary phenomenon produced by an extraordinary society.
- The piece reminds me of another composer in terms of variety of expression and overall musical fecundity.
- The subject of the poem is thus fairly straightforward: the creative fecundity of idleness in nature.
- For a painter, who can produce storerooms of paintings; for a wordsmith, either novelist or playwright, who can offer a library of texts, fecundity is no problem.
- She had a seductively energetic and infectious enthusiasm for teaching, and an incomparable fecundity of research ideas.
- The collection of essays exemplifies the diversity and fecundity of medieval rhetorical studies.
- While he increasingly retreated after 1867 from politics, his intellectual fecundity remained undiminished.
- The objections centered on rhetorical claims that the simplicity and uniformity of the new buildings threatened the cultural fecundity of the neighborhood.
- What elevates the musician above other electronic artists is the fecundity of his imagination: his resourceful ability to infuse his tracks with a distinctive compositional intelligence and command.
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