It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 29th.
Today's word is fecund, also pronounced fecund and spelled F-E-C-U-N-D.
fecund is an adjective.
It's a formal word that typically describes a person, animal,
or plant that is producing or able to produce many offspring.
It is synonymous with the words fertile and fruitful.
Feckend is also used figuratively to describe something especially intellectually productive or inventive,
as in a feckend source of ideas.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker.
By 2020, Sarai had started to resent her bucolic upbringing,
but the pandemic forced her to become reacquainted with the landscape of El Llano.
In several of the book's photographs, she appears engulfed by it almost entirely,
submerged from the nose down in deep turquoise water or climbing up on the dense foliage of a tree.
Others omit her altogether, capturing the natural realm unblemished by human presence,
a fecund environment dotted with snakes and birds and fungi.
The word fecund has been flourishing in the English language and describing fructuous things
since the 15th century.
It ultimately made its way into the English lexicon through the Latin adjective fecundus,
meaning fruitful.
fecund applies to things that yield offspring or fruit or results in abundance or with rapidity,