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"fecund" Definitions
  1. able to produce a lot of children, crops, etc. synonym fertile
  2. producing new and useful things, especially ideas

118 Sentences With "fecund"

How to use fecund in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fecund" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fecund". Mastering all the usages of "fecund" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I wanted to know the source of her fecund storytelling.
Hot, humid and swarming with mosquitoes, Sunnyside was fecund but deadly.
In relatively fecund Guizhou and Yunnan, the ratio is still falling.
Again, the meaning is mysterious and elusive, but here unmistakably fecund.
It can feel hard to parse, but it's also abundant, fecund, flourishing.
Unless, of course, your subconscious is as weird and fecund as Jeff VanderMeer's.
Swamps are fecund and productive because of, not in spite of, their diversity.
Infertile men have been shown to have less zinc than their more fecund brethren.
The ocean sunfish holds the Guinness world record for heaviest, most fecund bony fish.
Fecund mercenaries, dressed as empathetic clowns, would have us, the survivors, fund the funders.
But the movies from his fecund late period in France don't have musical scores.
From this fecund bog sprang one of the greatest songwriting partnerships of all time.
The government will then rent the homes to young couples, the more fecund the better.
Bloomberg reports that, speaking at a transport conference in Norway, Musk's fecund imagination briefly overflowed.
The grass and trees surrounding the ashram are menacingly fecund after months of hot rain.
The Forest Spirit is, on one hand, simply more glorious evidence of Miyazaki's fecund imagination.
But a pair at the rear of the property were defiantly alive and gloriously fecund.
Instead, vegetables are trucked in from California, Mexico and other more fecund parts of the world.
Never before had Valadon survived as an artist alone — Maurice's fecund periods helped sustain them both.
The fecund soils of its green capital, Kigali, sprout aid-agency offices like grass after the rains.
Still, the most fecund scallop beds are located in a region known as the Baie de Seine.
In that fecund little valley that divides our rational and and instinctive reactions to machines, Gannon's work thrives.
Six years ago, she had her first child at the hospital at the tender, fecund age of 58.
He wishes his dad didn't have to become a hack, seeing real potential in his fecund, rambunctious imagination.
There was Beyoncé's pregnancy announcement on Instagram, showing the singer, then expecting twins, resplendent as a fecund deity.
But Iraqis mistrust their government, and the country, cleaved by sectarian division, remains fecund soil for ISIS recruitment.
If you wanted winking, fecund footwork, you could arrive early for a set by the enigmatic DJ Paypal.
The artery-clogging prose is enlivened by the vivacious staging, which makes fecund use of Arnulfo Maldonado's set.
After laying their eggs, they die, and their carcasses turn into a biomass that stokes the fecund nature.
On view at Culver City's Klowden Mann gallery, the exhibit opens a gateway into an idiosyncratic and fecund world.
Mariana Sanchez's blue-green set studded with houseplants — some fecund, some withering and Jiyoun Chang's lights tend cool, too.
It was a fecund notion for Almodóvar, whose early insistence on the complexity of sexual orientation now seems prescient.
The morning smelled of wet grass and something heavier, some tree in flower, a fecund smell that verged on rottenness.
Between them to the north is a cluster of the country's most fecund regions: Castile and León, La Rioja, Aragón.
But for native species that evolved without worrying about the new predators, and are less fecund, it's a big problem.
Instead, his fecund miniatures brim with the possibility of regeneration; the exhibition's composition gradually comes to seem more cyclical than linear.
Whatever Sandy's persona lacked in Sturm und Drang, however, it made up for in the fire of his unbridled, fecund imagination.
The pulse gains noise and wavers while the strings, fecund behind the weight of 40 players, grow in presence before quietly receding.
Part of a fecund generation that emerged in France in the 1980s, Ms. Marin has never had an identifiable style and aesthetic.
Such a state of fission matches the domestic landscapes conjured by Shepard (1943-2017) during the most fecund period of his career.
The creatively fecund Paris-based couple were perfectly matched: She was the exuberant aesthetic force; he was the calm, calibrated business mind.
The figures appear to be either collapsing backward or rising forward; they read collectively as a strange and fecund proliferation of bodies.
By nightfall, Trump — to no surprise — replied "give me a break" once his comments became fecund for dissection on the major news networks.
There is no question of the sexuality of the corset, emphasizing the breasts and hips, and hence underscoring the stereotypically fecund female physique.
Island populations are subject to inbreeding and hence lowered reproduction rates, and grizzlies are among the least fecund of mammals to start with.
Another fecund resource is her mother's workroom at the back of the house, stacked with boxes of ribbons and folded scraps of fabric.
Some of the very first works of art were figures of hugely fecund women dropped all over Europe tens of thousands of years ago.
Made up of an ecology of pattering trickles, brightly interjecting chimes, and an evolving fog of delay, it evokes a self-contained, fecund biosphere.
In the large diptych, "South East North West" (2017), blue bands again conjure rivers, while myriad accompanying shapes suggest clustered buildings and fecund vegetation.
Having its world premiere at Yale Repertory Theater, "The Moors" springs from the same bleak yet fecund Victorian environment that the Brontë sisters called home.
That meant six (yes, six) hours of sceptered-isle navel gazing courtesy of two fecund and inventive young British playwrights, James Graham and Mike Bartlett.
At 24, she is the younger daughter in a creatively fecund clan that includes her sister, Lena, and their artist-parents, Carroll Dunham and Laurie Simmons.
The departure of Duffy in 21980 brought to a close one of the most creatively fecund and successful business partnerships in the history of the industry.
But first, through their leafy, dappled shade wove a flood of very pretty gardeners in woven raffia skirts, fecund with blooms, under crisp sky-blue shirting.
The fecund abundance that is insects' singular trait should enable them to recover, but only if they are given the space and the opportunity to do so.
Shadows lengthened through the backyard, creatures whirring and growling, plants growing tall and blossoming, fecund and irreverent, while inside the tank the conch sat in its corner.
She portrayed cloth-swaddled human bodies, dream-world topographic textures, and a spindly tree whose leafless branches and runaway root system entwine in an orgy of fecund growth.
He is the son of Pindar and Celia Cohen, a pair of unrestrainedly eccentric academics who are hosting the titular party in their fecund, almost magical Brookline garden.
Hugo called it a "vast symphony in stone" as "powerful and fecund as the divine creation," and despaired that it had come to be an object of ridicule.
I cracked open a copy and encountered a fecund landscape: folk tales saturated with pollen, cobwebs, plums, petals, gristle, guts, "uncombed cats" and the bodies of human women.
Later, poorer migrants settled the sandy Wiregrass region in the south-east, and in the beautiful but less fecund northern hills, where there were few slaves and fewer roads.
I want a demented, throbbing, fecund nature to overrun this whole country, to overturn the wretched consequences of the laws that we have, in our stupidity, set for ourselves.
That was an era when Prince was particularly fecund, masterminding spinoff groups like Apollonia 19853 (represented here with "Sex Shooter"), Vanity 6 ("Make-Up") and the Time ("Jungle Love").
The verdant, V-shaped tableau, as absorbing as it is disorienting in this metropolitan context, evokes the fantasy of being a parched desert traveler stumbling across a fecund oasis.
From there he entered a prolonged yet fecund crisis, proceeding with a blend of caution and impatience, reconsidering every change yet usually making each canvas feel like a precarious scramble.
And yet within these seeming limitations a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition.
And yet, within these seeming limitations a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition.
And yet within these seeming limitations, a remarkably fecund and resonant body of work has evolved as demonstrated with unusual clarity (and in natural light) by this small but comprehensive exhibition.
These anecdotes call to attention the formative role of nightlife spaces in shaping and strengthening LGBTQ identity, and how it continues to be a fecund site for activism, resistance, and expression.
If they did, you would find yourself in a terrifyingly fecund primordial soup in which all sorts of ideas could develop, mutate, cross-pollinate, do battle, die off and be reborn.
Didion seems troubled by the idea that the ground feels more unstable in the South; that it is wet and porous, without any solid boundaries; that it is simultaneously fecund and rotting.
This will raise the number of what scientists call B.O.F.F.s (Big Old Fecund Females), which produce more eggs and eggs of better quality, further increasing the density of fish inside the reserve.
That photograph is now in itself a specific cultural language; and for good or ill it "taught" us a new way of seeing and consuming women's bodies, specifically when they are obviously fecund.
While Mary is shown as spirited, smart, and confident, Rourke portrays Elizabeth as an insecure and wobbly person, obsessed by her inability to bear a child and therefore jealous of her fecund cousin.
The 2400 acres surrounding the designer's house have been planned so that some part of the grounds will always be fecund and some part will always be fallow: birth following death following birth.
McGhee's side of the gallery is dominated by blue and bright flashes of yellow, while Harris's works largely feature earth and jewel tones, creating the feel of a sunny-blue sky above fecund earth.
Farther west along 59th Street, at the intersection of Sixth Avenue, might have been home to yet another reimagined Central Park – this, from the fecund pen of Ernest Flagg, the noted architect, circa 1904.
Picked apart and poured over by a confederacy of film-obsessed mavens with keen eyes and airtight attention spans, Stanley Kubrick's opus The Shining (230) has proven remarkably fecund over its 213-year lifetime.
He keeps you watching, as do the images of reverberant, often haunting power and beauty, including a fecund garden in which kale, berries and gourds grow in bleak contrast to the ship's laboratory fetuses.
But in fashion — an unnatural world, though one equally transformative, and one that also runs on its own cycle of birth and death, birth and death — fall is the most fecund time of year.
This Florida is ferocious and fecund, set ablaze not only by the sun but by the reflection of another, unseen subject: the water, affixed to the sea grape tree by the latter's very name.
It reflects on his time in Cuba with equally fecund depictions of leaves and fruit and a large, if not giant, tense rabbit in its burrow, about to eat a banana, listening for a signal.
Beyoncé is pregnant with twins, equal parts Mother Earth and Venus on a fecund planetary stage that dismisses the boundary of indoor and outdoor—the implication is that she is also pregnant with the next world.
His partner, Peter Schlesinger, a young California artist who had posed for many of his paintings, had left him after five years, ending a romance that coincided with one of Mr. Hockney's most artistically fecund periods.
Eels, frogs, shrimp and fish proliferate with tropical abandon, particularly in the fecund bottleneck where, viewed from above, the river appears to fray into dozens of delicate blue fibers before braiding itself back into open water.
It uses a fecund premise, a large cast of recognizable characters, a rotating point of view, a propulsive plot, a humane vision and clean, non-ostentatious (if occasionally uninspired) prose to explore a fraught cultural topic.
Both artists appear in Galerie Lelong's healthy introduction to Grupo Frente, the abstract art movement they participated in during the fecund 1950s along with Lygia Clark and seven others, many of whom deserve more renown here.
After all, the 1970s, an especially fecund period for her music-making, was the era of the confessional singer-songwriter, when records by Carole King, James Taylor, Carly Simon, Jim Croce, Joni Mitchell and Jackson Browne prevailed.
After breaking through to a wider audience with the fecund, trippy pop of Merriweather Post Pavilion, the band came back with a muddy collection of hookless songs, many of them reliant on live instrumentation and obscure samples.
This is the gift of Pierpaolo Piccioli at Valentino, whose fecund imagination produces the most rococo embroidery in sequins, velvet and lace — and then collages it together like Matisse and puts it on a T-shirt dress.
The result is a compact yet liberated primer of Bourgeois's implicitly feminist art, its fecund repeating forms, alternately architectonic and fleshy figures, intimations of pregnancy and birth and, most famously, giant spider sculptures in bronze or steel.
Jones — once half of a New York artist couple and now mostly a solo artist and cultural entrepreneur — felt the sweet taste of success when she saw her fecund she-wolf looming on the sides of the river.
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith is a great example — her music sounds like it comes from some fecund, bubbling near-future swamp, and I loved writing about her place in a long tradition of ambient and experimental musicians earlier this year.
Though a tightly packed train or bus might lend itself to a transmission, public health experts say that public transit may be less virus-fecund than other places people gather for longer periods, like classrooms or open-plan offices.
Mr. Ghesquière was at romp in the fields of fashion, mixing up Belle Époque prints — swirling curlicues and Art Nouveau portraits; fecund florals; thoughts of Sarah Bernhardt and Marcel Proust — with rainbow sequin zigzag knits and lacy embroidered tulle.
As Stone noted recently on Twitter, by targeting minority and religious populations, Beijing is attacking the country's more fecund groups, in what amounts to a statement that if Han birthrates have fallen, minority birthrates must be cut to match.
Instead, bursting with brand-new maternal pride, I revealed the secret of my fecund abdomen to anyone it made sense to do so in person: diner waitresses, vague acquaintances I ran into at auditions, any of my more amiable Lyft drivers.
A reminder that for this amazingly fecund playwright, now 77, there are no small parts, in life or on stage ("Hero's Welcome" runs 2:1503; "Confusions" runs 2:05) 59E59 Theaters, 59 East 59th Street, 212-279-4200, 653e59.org.
A reminder that for this amazingly fecund playwright, now 77, there are no small parts, in life or on stage ("Hero's Welcome" runs 2:20; "Confusions" runs 2:05) 59E59 Theaters, 473 East 59th Street, 212-279-4200, 59e59.org.
A reminder that for this amazingly fecund playwright, now 77, there are no small parts, in life or on stage ("Hero's Welcome" runs 13003:20; "Confusions" runs 2:05) 1593E1583 Theaters, 1573 East 1563th Street, 1553-1543-1533, 1523e1513.org.
It is a polychrome plaster that supersedes the political histories of the two men and attests to the timelessness — not of classicism — but of the palpable sense of form that Marini found in the fecund roundedness of the Venus of Willendorf.
But the ideas and art brought forth during the fecund period of Viennese history from the late 1880s to the 19473s endured—from Loos's modernist architecture to Gustav Klimt's symbolist canvasses, from Schoenberg's atonal music and Mahler's Sturm und Drang to Ludwig Wittgenstein's philosophy.
"Abnormal sharks showed a symmetric bicephaly that could be caused by the high number of embryos found in the uterus of the blue shark, which is the most fecund species of shark in the world," Galván-Magaña and his team noted in the study.
"Feeding such people the lie that their problems are mainly external in origin—that they are the victims of scheming elites, immigrants, black welfare malingerers, superabundantly fecund Mexicans, capitalism with Chinese characteristics, Walmart, Wall Street, their neighbors—is the political equivalent of selling them heroin," Williamson says.
After the fall less than a month earlier of the Tunisian dictator, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, it seemed the frozen, decades-long Arab confrontation of cynical dictators and repressed Islamists — fecund in the incubation of jihadi terrorists — had given way to the possibility of more inclusive societies.
With "Carpet Angel" (1992), which was in Ward's first New Museum show and has not been exhibited since, a mound of carpet scraps on the floor (left in Ward's studio by the previous tenant) sprouts surprisingly lovely, even floral, mangled plastic bottles; this urban junk is oddly fecund.
You might or might not know the "1997 Notorious B.I.G. hit," GOING BACK TO CALI, but if you are trying to get it through the crossings, you had better know what ELOCUTE and FECUND mean, or that a PICA is 12 points, typographically speaking, or what a CELESTA is.
Roth, who died Tuesday evening at 85, was the last front-rank survivor of a generation of fecund and authoritative and, yes, white and male novelists — the others included John Updike, Norman Mailer and Saul Bellow — who helped define American experience in the second half of the 20th century.
And if you have access to a fig tree – like, say, the one growing fecund and huge in front of that house near the subway station on the way home – you can nab a wide leaf off it on which to rest the fish after you've grilled one side.
You may recognize a bit of A.S. Byatt in the way Perry leaps into her characters' philosophical debates, but she is at her lushest and most original when she can describe the natural world — not lyrically, but in a gothic mode, all rotting and fecund vegetation and marshy ground.
Mr. Murphy was in an ideal bargaining position not only because he possesses a fecund imagination able to spin out one successful series after another, but because Apple and Amazon have lately proved themselves willing to spend their way into rivalries with the old-line movie studios and television networks.
When my colleagues and I began planning this issue, we were overwhelmed: We had always known that this was perhaps the most culturally fecund time in the city's history, but we hadn't understood how phenomenal it truly was in its diversity and depth until we began detailing those years' accomplishments.
The company's interpretations of Faulkner's "The Sound and the Fury," Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" and, above all, F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" — rendered in "Gatz" as a word-for-word, six-hour marathon — seemed to pulse dynamically in that fecund space between the written narrative and a reader's imagination.
It's a better way to unload the haul from the garden — herself now fecund and prolific, the magnificent yield weighting down the vines and swollen under the leaves — than side-tossing your overwhelming motherlode of zucchini into the back seats of parked cars whose unsuspecting owners have left the windows rolled down.
Those now well-known, critically praised concoctions, luscious and oozing a fecund air, share spiritual affinities as much with the colorful experiments of such Early Modernist abstractionists as Wassily Kandinsky or Sonia and Robert Delaunay as they do with some of the much later, exuberant abstractions of the American painter Elizabeth Murray (21941–203).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Picked apart and pored over by a confederacy of film-obsessed mavens with keen eyes and airtight attention spans, Stanley Kubrick's opus The Shining (663) has proven remarkably fecund over its 266-year lifetime — almost inexhaustible, like a runaway dream or a repressed memory, or perhaps more appropriately, the Winchester Mystery House.
LOOKING AT THESE structures — there are around a dozen of them in a town with fewer than 20,000 inhabitants — one might wonder what, exactly, made Karuizawa such fecund ground for experimental architecture: After all, it's not as if Larchmont or Kennebunk or Aquinnah (perhaps the town's closest psychographic equivalents) are known for their forward-thinking buildings.
In a thrilling segment which sees Marks trapped by the sheer amount of technology at his disposal—imprisoned by the very lights and lasers that have brought him so much joy over the years—whilst a disco remix of Richard Strauss' "Also Spach Zarathustra" pounds away with the fecund ferocity of gabber at its most powerfully potent, we begin to understand the raw appeal of the Coliseum: imagine being out of your nut whilst Marks is tinkering away with the awesome lightshow.

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