| fertile Oct 25th 2013, 02:13, by 202.160.35.177 | | | | Line 54: | Line 54: | | | * Lithuanian: {{t|lt|derlingas}} | | * Lithuanian: {{t|lt|derlingas}} | | | * Malay: {{t|ms|subur}} | | * Malay: {{t|ms|subur}} | | | + | * Maori: {{t|mi|haumako}}, {{t|mi|mōmona}} | | | * Polish: {{t+|pl|żyzny}} | | * Polish: {{t+|pl|żyzny}} | | | * Portuguese: {{t+|pt|fértil}} | | * Portuguese: {{t+|pt|fértil}} |
Latest revision as of 02:13, 25 October 2013 English[edit] Etymology[edit] From Old French, from Latin fertilis ("fruitful, fertile"), from ferō ("I bear, carry"). Pronunciation[edit] Adjective[edit] fertile (comparative more fertile, superlative most fertile) - (of land etc) capable of growing abundant crops; productive
- (biology) capable of reproducing; fecund, fruitful
- (biology) capable of developing past the egg stage
- (of an imagination etc) productive or prolific
Synonyms[edit] Antonyms[edit] Related terms[edit] Translations[edit] (biology) capable of reproducing (biology) capable of developing past the egg stage (of an imagination etc) productive or prolific - The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Help:How to check translations.
Translations to be checked External links[edit] Adjective[edit] fertile (masculine and feminine, plural fertiles) - fertile
Anagrams[edit]
Italian[edit] Adjective[edit] fertile m, f (masculine and feminine plural fertili) - fertile
Antonyms[edit] Related terms[edit] See also[edit] Adjective[edit] fertile - nominative neuter singular of fertilis
- accusative neuter singular of fertilis
- vocative neuter singular of fertilis
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