Fecund in a sentence as an adjective

Such insults would hardly be sterile, they would be fecund.

It creates a fecund field for fraud, seedstock for scammers.

Cutely named forgotten programmes written in J were a more fecund source of problems.

The earth is not some exhausted husk, as implied by the OP. Its fecund and fertile and ready to produce orders of magnitude more food as required.

Actually, with birth control we fool our bodies into thinking that we're mating so fecundity doesn't apply I guess.

No wonder religions are the most fecund, whereas atheism tends to sterility.

Haskell seems to be a very fecund place to devise type-theoretic patterns and techniques.

Selection of those who are allowed to be most fecund seems to me like a natural extension of neo-darwinism.

That being said, I think we should use the ideas of science, and philosophy of science, to improve our art and make it more meaningful and fecund for ideas.

And fecundity is an important criterion for a site that uses posts as a catalyst for productive discussion.

A lot of greatness grew out of that fecund environment — artists like Diebenkorn or luminaries like Alice Waters.

The result was that Dahomean kings were very fecund, while ordinary Dahomean men were often celibate and barren.

Ashkenazi Jews comprise a significant fraction of the population of Israel, and they are a rather intellectually fecund group.

How does this efficiency jump happen where suddenly we only need a few offspring over the course of decades to outpaced the evolution of much more fecund populations?

I think "neckbeard" may have gotten confused with "greybeard," which is used to refer to the elders of ages since past, whom have bestowed upon us mortals the eternally fecund gifts of unix, posix, C, etc.

At the high school I went to, the football team played second fiddle to the soccer team, but in general, unless you bought your own equipment, you were still playing with helmets, uniforms, and other equipment that was somewhat fecund.

Imagine exceedingly libidinous and hyper fecund GMO California raisins with fangs, ...on bathsalts and antigravity.

There is a thing that applies to scientific theories, a question of whether they are fecund, do they provoke more insights and thoughts and productive debate?Some things I write might be very true, or very heartfelt, or very emotionally powerful, but not fecund.

Fecund definitions

adjective

capable of producing offspring or vegetation

adjective

intellectually productive; "a prolific writer"; "a fecund imagination"

See also: fertile prolific