How could one fecundate the universal doubt so that it should give birth to a new faith?
2
Peace had happily fecundated the prodigious resources of the country.
3
The Polynesians circumcise when childhood ends and thus consecrate the fecundating organ to the Deity.
4
To erect these peduncles when the germ was fecundated.
5
That these historic Resolutions contained the fecundating germs of the Civil War, is by the way.
6
Health was in universal labor, in the effort made, in the power which fecundates and which produces.
7
Underfoot the earth was fecundating in dampness.
8
It was one of the modifications of sun worship, and was a symbol of the fecundating power of that luminary.
9
Visions crossed his mind, born in the soft warm air of these fecundating winds, of this strange yet peaceful scene.
10
The younger the fruit of the carica, the more milk it yields: it is even found in the germen scarcely fecundated.
11
From the moment when the spermatozoon penetrates and fecundates the ovum, the fate of the future being is settled by their disposition.
12
The occurrence of multiple pregnancies may be explained by the supposition that ova matured subsequent to the first fecundation are also fecundated.
13
There is a fecundating power in them which generates thought, and it is in the moral nature that this force is most apparent.
14
It attracts them together and unites them, and when the germ of a new being is fecundated, the individuals can sleep in peace.
15
They usually consist of a filament and an anther, the anther being the essential part in which the pollen, or fecundating dust, is formed.
16
In fact, the re-absorption of the fecundating liquid impresses upon the entire economy new energy, and a virility which contributes to the prolongation of life.