US /prəˈlɪfɪk/
・UK /prəˈlɪfɪk/
And while we've covered Shakespeare's linguistic creativity before, linguist Julia Landman notes that he was also prolific with pet names, sprinkling animal-based terms of endearment, like Dove, Ladybird, and Lamb, throughout "Romeo and Juliet" and "Hamlet."
that he was also prolific with pet names,
Accelerators are prolific in Silicon Valley, providing the crucial early support that John and Patrick needed.
Accelerators are prolific in Silicon Valley,
We have: 'takedown', 'prolific' and 'infamous'.
seize dark-web site of world's most prolific ransomware gang.
Theo Van Gogh was a prolific and enlightening filmmaker.
Adam Osmond was once one of the most prolific gamblers in the US.
He's a prolific technical mind.
It's the thigh. By day, a prolific food stylist.
Spector has been described as a violent man and a gun-toting menace in the years following his most prolific era.
But the most prolific mother ever, according to Guinness World Records, was Mrs. Feodor Vassilyev in 19th-century Russia.
If you compare that to men in more modern times, the most prolific fathers today have about 200 children.
These are some of the questions I'm going to be discussing with prolific designer and architect Oki Sato.