0 producing a great number or amount of something:
He was probably the most prolific songwriter of his generation.
Rabbits and other rodents are prolific (= have a lot of babies).
1 producing a great number or amount of something:
He was probably the most prolific songwriter of his generation.
It is realised that calculations based on self-portraits favour the social representation of the most prolific artists, who maybe were those with the greatest egos.
He is the most prolific child in the study as far as sheer number of utterances is concerned (30% of the corpus).
Oviposition continues over several weeks, and is most prolific in sunny weather.
Advertisements and product packaging are a prolific source of catch-phrases, which are themselves often set in quotation marks.
The past decades have moreover been especially prolific in generating new theoretical perspectives which may now often coexist with older ones.
She specifically mentions the markers oh and well which, incidentally, are very prolific in my data.
Fish remains should be prolific in all excavated samples from habitation areas if flotation is implemented.
In this early period, those directly concerned with controversies over labour-employers and the state-were the most prolific recorders of labour issues.