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Showing results for prolific.
Definitions

prolific

[pruh-lif-ik] / prəˈlɪf ɪk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A prolific opening batter, Morris had two spells as Glamorgan captain and led the county to the Sunday League title in 1993.

From BBC

He is not just a prolific creator but a mogul who owns his own studio, controls casting decisions and has cultivated a public image rooted in faith, morality and philanthropy.

From Salon

Each species on Earth can trace its roots back to the same cluster of ancestral organisms and occupies a distinct position on a single, complex, prolifically branching, unfathomably extensive and largely invisible tree of life.

From The Wall Street Journal

Mr. Markovits is a prolific author whose diverse work includes a trilogy of historical novels about Byron.

From The Wall Street Journal

In the Delaware portion of the Permian, its most prolific region, drillers crank out between 5 and 6 barrels of water, on average, for every barrel of oil.

From The Wall Street Journal