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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fecund soil" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when describing soil that is rich in nutrients and capable of supporting abundant plant growth. Example: "The farmer was pleased with the fecund soil, as it produced a bountiful harvest each year."
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We have a partial answer, based on information seeded by White House minions in the fecund soil of the complicit media.
Instead, the visitor moves through a series of potent sensory experiences, and as the climate shifts from gallery to gallery, the smell of fecund soil, the sound of water and the presence of nutmeg, cacao and ginger cast a tropical spell.
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Somewhere in that fecund, brutal, half-civilized land lay the answer to my dreams.
For example, exposure of parental generations of Aegilops triuncialis annual grass to stressful soils resulted in larger, more fecund progeny, which is a major factor contributing to the spread of the species (Dyer et al. 2010).
In plants, for instance, positive cross-generational stress effects have been observed in an annual grass, Aegilops triuncialis, where exposure of parental generations to stressful soils resulted in larger, more fecund progeny facilitating invasion to novel environments (Dyer et al. 2010).
Life, in all its forms, seems robust and fecund when you observe it on the ground.
Mollisols (black soils) are widely distributed in the northeast of China and are considered to be highly fecund and productive (Wei et al. 2008).
It's fecund terrain.
The locusts are fecund.
And Mailer's fecund "infirmity"?
It was fun and fecund.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com