Synonyms for fecundate


Grammar : Verb
Spell : fee-kuh n-deyt, fek-uh n-
Phonetic Transcription : ˈfi kənˌdeɪt, ˈfɛk ən-


Définition of fecundate

  • verb impregnate
Example sentences :
  • The blood in our veins is warm enough to fecundate the soil of the Republic.
  • Extract from : « Graham's Magazine Vol XXXIII No. 1 July 1848 » by Various
  • He speaks by his arts, which might fecundate our human inventions.
  • Extract from : « The Insect » by Jules Michelet
  • The fluid from one male will fecundate the eggs of half a dozen females.
  • Extract from : « Soil Culture » by J. H. Walden
  • Genius needs to retreat upon itself, to fecundate itself until from the nightmare of one life is born the dream of another.
  • Extract from : « A Novelist on Novels » by W. L. George
  • There remained no other free communities whose culture could fecundate that of the Greek and other cities held in tutelage.
  • Extract from : « The Evolution of States » by J. M. Robertson
  • Very few flowers can fecundate directly; nearly all have need of an intermediary, the wind, an insect, a bird.
  • Extract from : « The Natural Philosophy of Love » by Remy de Gourmont
  • But instinct is routine, and if thought did not fecundate it, it would no more progress in man than in the bee or ant.
  • Extract from : « The Foundations of Science: Science and Hypothesis, The Value of Science, Science and Method » by Henri Poincar
  • How could one fecundate the universal doubt so that it should give birth to a new faith?
  • Extract from : « The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete » by Emile Zola

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