exuberant

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exuberant

 [eg-zu´ber-ant]
copious or excessive in production; showing excessive proliferation.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

ex·u·ber·ant

(ek-zū'bĕr-ănt),
Denoting excessive proliferation or growth, as of a tissue or granulation.
[L. exubero, to abound, be abundant]
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

ex·u·ber·ant

(eg-zū'bĕr-ănt)
Denoting excessive proliferation or growth, as of granulation tissue.
[L. exubero, to abound, be abundant]
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012
References in periodicals archive ?
For example, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that the UAE's GDP grew 11.5 percent in 2006 (when oil prices were soaring), and forecasts that GDP will grow far less exuberantly at 5.8 percent in 2007.
Figures neatly enter picture frame at the left and right at the same time that sinuous trees and rocks exuberantly burst out of the picture.
Earlier lab experiments found plants growing exuberantly with extra carbon dioxide, but these tests provided abundant water and nutrients.
The modern tendency among a growing number of jockeys to celebrate success exuberantly, before it has been sealed at the winning post, meant it was inevitable that someone's enthusiasm would be fired off before the line, with disastrous consequences.
From splashing in a fountain to hitching a ride on a skateboard, City Angel exuberantly demonstrates her affection for "the city she has come to love." In addition to reveling in the riches of the city, she provides unseen help for its citizens as she welcomes a newborn zebra into the zoo, gently scolds a litterbug, or grants a basketball player's wish by guiding his shot through the basket.
Our first impression of Rooster Cobb, nicknamed for exuberantly waking up his parents in the mornings when he was a child, is provided by his high school English teacher, recently turned guidance counselor.
33 and his sweet and sensuous rendition of Paul Ben-Haim's Berceuse Sfaradite; his renditions of several selections from Nicolo Paganini's exuberantly virtuosic Opus 1 Caprices are taken at nail-biting tempo yet carried off with apparently effortless perfection; his interpretation of Jean-Marie Leclair's Sonata op.
Though Blanchard never disappoints, he exuberantly makes good on the promise of his popular film scores for Mo' Better Blues, Malcolm X and Barbershop.
Glover is assured and confident while Rennie is just so wonderfully, exuberantly over the top he is almost balanced.
is exuberantly illustrated by Isabelle Decenciere and comes accompanied by a special audio CD by Drachman.
Seven years may be how long it takes for a given class of investors to forget about the risk of a crash, to decide exuberantly that they are living in a new world, and to overextend themselves.
During a time of doubt, despair and sickness, a little girl with a performer's smile skipped up to me exuberantly and shrilled, 'Hello Uncle!