Way down South, down Florida way, the land is fecund, the air is ripe with growth. |
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The fashion world is a fecund, fruitful and fertile source of metaphoric phrases. |
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Until now, the only human cells thought fecund enough for the purpose of transplant growth were rare, primitive cells called stem cells. |
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They have let loose their fecund imaginations on the facts of Barrie's life like a pack of hungry dogs. |
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Culture flourished in this fecund valley in 1879, when the opera house, decreed a national historic landmark in 1973, first opened. |
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Deer are a fecund species, and they produce multiple offspring when stressed. |
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An accomplished harmonicist and vocalist, Godboo's talent has flourished in the fecund blues milieu. |
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The natural surroundings of the airfield, draped in early morning mist, look too lush and fecund for a country gripped by a grim war. |
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It spread over the floor with a fecund exuberance that brought to mind cypress vines, plants that take root wherever they touch the ground. |
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Naturalistic sculptures of fecund blackberry vines randomly climbed the walls. |
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The fecund decorations are transplanted in the exquisitely designed gold-plated jewels embellished with precious stones. |
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Women with either resolved or unresolved infecundity were significantly older than fecund women. |
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Griffiths asserts that works read by religious readers are intrinsically fecund, inexhaustibly edifying, and delighting. |
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The sea is blissfully unpolluted, and so supports a fecund, burgeoning variety of life. |
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It's not just marigolds and magnolias that grow abundantly in the fecund heat of the South. |
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Women were considered fecund if they became pregnant within 12 cycles of regular unprotected intercourse. |
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The third generation were less fecund, one son dying as a youth, the other marrying late and having no children. |
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Judging by the canvases stacked in his cramped studio awaiting framing for the exhibition that opens at Brown's later this month, he is as fecund as ever. |
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The parasite infects harbour, grey and hooded seals, however seal worms are more abundant, grow larger and more fecund in grey seals. |
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He claims not to be against industrialisation except in his fecund backyard. The villagers' resistance to the project has seen ugly violence. |
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This fecund dialogue expresses, in a significant way, the unity and universality of the Order. |
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Found in waters down to 100 m, they are highly fecund and spawn mainly in the winter months. |
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It is this whole rich and fecund course that the exhibition Monet in the National Galleries of the Grand Palais in Paris re-questions. |
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The desire to be fecund could lead us to be absorbed with ourselves, to be annoyed, bitter and sterile. |
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It also argues that an ethics of difference, and a poetics to support it, are needed in order to move the course of history in a more fruitful and fecund direction. |
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We should derive pleasure from activities promoting health, resource acquisition, desirable mates and fecund children. |
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Sacred bovids, beginning with the fecund cow and advancing to the virile bull, were finally degraded to mere substance in the hands of humanized deities. |
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Nondestructive analyses of plasma sampled from birds when captured may, however, be used to identify fecund females, using an egg yolk protein called vitellogenin. |
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She is fertile and fecund and as naturally beautiful as you could imagine. |
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There is something a little sinister about it, amid that green and fecund landscape, with its skirting of pine and silver birch and the furze and bracken above. |
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The unmet need for contraception is considerable: 14.2 per cent of all fecund women who are married or in a consensual union and want to space or avoid their next pregnancy do not use any method of family planning. |
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Yet no matter how fecund nature is, humans are more so. |
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Furthermore, there is less time for an older limiter to change her desires before she becomes in fecund. |
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The interlocking where different points of view and periods of time mingle, form the fecund world to be discovered little by little by immersion in the picture. |
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In her 30s, a woman becomes ever less fecund. |
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Black rockfish, like most other rockfish, are long-lived, moderately fecund livebearers with long reproductive life spans. |
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Originally, the thought was that whichever genes make men gay might make women more fecund, and possibly vice versa. In this section If looks could kill Lick that! |
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Unmet need is defined as the proportion of married, fecund women who say they prefer to stop childbearing or wait at least two years before becoming pregnant, but are not using a contraceptive method. |
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The females of scallops are highly fecund, capable of producing hundreds of millions of eggs per year. |
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But his paint-bombing bombardment and this train are generative, fecund gestures, as well as scatalogical. |
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That openness made the early Google a chaotically fecund operation. |
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As many of you know, John Ralston Saul was instrumental in encouraging the Aberdeen Cultural Centre to have this festival and it is our joy to see that it has come to fruition in such an ample and fecund state. |
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