different between ploughable vs fecund

ploughable

English

Etymology

plough +? -able

Adjective

ploughable (comparative more ploughable, superlative most ploughable)

  1. (British spelling) Alternative spelling of plowable

ploughable From the web:

  • what does ploughed mean
  • what does the word ploughed mean
  • what does getting ploughed mean
  • what does ploughing mean sexually


fecund

English

Alternative forms

  • fœcund (hypercorrect, obsolete)

Etymology

From Middle French fécond, from Latin fecundus (fertile), which is related to f?tus and f?mina (woman).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?f?.k?nd/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?fi?.k?nd/
  • Rhymes: -?nd

Adjective

fecund (comparative more fecund, superlative most fecund)

  1. (formal) Highly fertile; able to produce offspring.
  2. (figuratively) Leading to new ideas or innovation.
    • 1906, Charles Sanders Pierce, "The Basis of Pragmatism in the Normative Sciences", in The Essential Pierce: Selected Philosophical Writings, volume II, page 373
      This idea of Aristotle's has proved marvellously fecund; and in truth it is the only idea covering quite the whole area of cenoscopy that has shown any marked uberosity.

Synonyms

  • (highly fertile): fertile
  • (leading to new ideas or innovation): fertile, productive, prolific

Related terms

  • fecundity

Translations


Romanian

Etymology

From French fécond, from Latin fecundus.

Adjective

fecund m or n (feminine singular fecund?, masculine plural fecunzi, feminine and neuter plural fecunde)

  1. fruitful

Declension

Related terms

  • fecunda
  • fecunditate

fecund From the web:

  • what fecundity means
  • fecund what does this mean
  • what is fecundity in biology
  • what is fecundity in fish
  • what is fecundity rate
  • what is fecundity in demography
  • what does fecundity mean in ethics
  • what is fecundity brainly
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