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fecund Meaning in Tamil ( fecund வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



Adjective:

அதுவேயாகும்,



fecund தமிழ் அர்த்தத்தின் உதாரணம்:

ஏர் ஃபோர்ஸ் ஒன் என்பதை சுட்டிக்காட்டும் வகையில் வெளிப்புறத்தில் அதனுடைய மூக்கில் –வழுக்கையுடன் கூடிய கழுகின் படம் வரைந்த - முதல் விமானம் அதுவேயாகும்.

அவ்வருடம் மட்டுமே இங்கிலாந்து கால்பந்து உலகக் கோப்பையை நடத்தியுள்ளது, இங்கிலாந்தின் ஒரே கால்பந்து உலகக் கோப்பை வாகையும் அதுவேயாகும்.

நீரின் உறைநிலையும் அதுவேயாகும்.

fecund's Usage Examples:

That great nim ural feature of Egypt, the Nile, was of course one of the gods; mer name was Hapi, and as a sign of his fecundity he had long and dulous breasts like a woman.


This arrangement facilitates the internal fecundation of the female without copulation, the female absorbs the spermatozoa by squeezing them out of the spermatophore between the cloacal lips.


The larger beasts of prey are not met with, and little check is therefore put on the natural fecundity of the graminivorous species.


Such is their fecundity that it has been asserted that one female (probably of P.


The cache-sexe can be traced to the Paleolithic period, where stone carvings of fecund women, such as the Venus of Lespugue, depict panels of string fore and aft.


That chinchillas have not under such circumstances become rare, if not extinct, is owing to their extraordinary fecundity, the female usually producing five or six young twice a year.


Two hundred discourses exist to prove his fecundity, while his versatility is shown by the fact that he could treat the same subject differently on half a dozen occasions.


By degrees the fecundity improved, and in about twenty years became equal to what it is in Europe.


Viability, by which are meant fecundity, longevity and vigour, was low in average.


In all the tailless batrachians (with the exception of a single known viviparous toad),the male clings to the female round the breast, at the arm-pits, or round the waist, and awaits, often for hours or days, the deposition of the ova, which are immediately fecundated by several seminal emissions.


In 1831 Patrick Matthew, in the appendix to a book on naval timber and arboriculture, laid stress on the extreme fecundity of nature "who has in all the varieties of her offspring a prolific power much beyond (in many cases a thousandfold) what is necessary to fill up the vacancies caused by senile decay.


fecund English landscapes, which we can only struggle to unravel.





Synonyms:

fertile,



Antonyms:

impotent, sterile,

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