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Перевод: fecund speek fecund


[прилагательное]
плодородный; плодовитый


Тезаурус:

  1. The fecund Mr Anderson is, among other things, famous for bringing us the film classic If.
  2. The mother is fecund.
  3. For me the chief attractions of this programme were the two pieces by Hans Gl, whom I knew towards the end of his long and fecund life (he died in October 1987, at the age of 97).
  4. These have no pretensions to beauty as we normally conceive it; they evoke the fecund, swelling, expansive, receptive aspect of womanhood.
  5. Sometimes they cluster on a page like blackberries on a fecund bush, and made me wonder with a stab of unease whether my own writings on American politics and presidents have not managed equally often narrowly to miss the usage and the nomenclature.
  6. With sea eagles soaring overhead, the forest dipping into the sea and turquoise flying-fish skipping in the wake, it is possible to imagine any idyllic fecund system running from the highest tip of the forest to the bottom of the shallow sea.
  7. Yet he's found that several other farmers have been experiencing the fecund year.
  8. Societies may choose to emphasize the "fecund" side of the feminine, by exalting an image of woman that is plump and heavy-breasted, or there may be a preference for a youthful, virginal beauty, with "natural" styles of hair and a slim figure to go with it.
  9. Pigs, which are even more fecund than the goats, take the eggs and young of ground-nesting birds, the eggs of tortoises and turtles (and young tortoises up to the age of five), and destroy vegetation by digging for roots and soil invertebrates.
  10. The effect on the image of the happy, fecund housewife and mother of the suburbs was puzzling.
  11. It now numbers some 40 people, as well as the Jersey cows, the Aberdeen Angus bull, the horse, three ponies, and a handful of fecund goats and breeding sows.
  12. Even his extraordinarily fecund language struggled to reassert the recollection: "the ideal couple," "the beautiful inspiration," "illusion and reality," (by which he meant that it was simply too good to be true; too perfect to last - a forbidding afterthought).
  13. That might just be possible in countries with zero-growth populations, but in the fecund Third World the result would be the equivalent of the ancient Saxon custom of gavelkind, in which the inheritance was divided equally among all the sons.

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