[
UK
/fɛkˈʌndɪti/
]
[ US /fəˈkəndɪti/ ]
[ US /fəˈkəndɪti/ ]
NOUN
- the intellectual productivity of a creative imagination
- the quality of something that causes or assists healthy growth
- the state of being fertile; capable of producing offspring
How To Use fecundity In A Sentence
- The collection of essays exemplifies the diversity and fecundity of medieval rhetorical studies.
- Fecundity declines rapidly after the age of 40.
- The fecundity of her imagination remained undiminished even at 80.
- Decades ago, older pregnant women were mainly those with low fecundity or high parity.
- 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.
- The illustrations throughout achieve density without confusion, fecundity without claustrophobia.
- It is only that, in seeking to compensate himself for his infecundity, he has fallen into the deep sea of preciosity. Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers
- Not their beauty, not their particularity, just their smothering, deafening fecundity. SACRAMENT
- As the quotation marks indicate, transcendence in these terms would not be Christian transcendence, nor would fecundity be synonymous with biological reproduction.
- I was astonished to learn that throughout their life they have lived on the margins of the society, most of them unmarried or dumped due to infecundity, but they demonstrated far more tenacity and courage than any other sufferers.