Budding

Word BUDDING
Character 7
Hyphenation bud ding
Pronunciations /ˈbʌdiŋ/

Definitions and meanings of "Budding"

What do we mean by budding?

Being in an early developmental stage. adjective

Producing buds: as, a budding tree.

Being in the condition of a bud; figuratively, being in an early stage of growth; being at the entrance of a period of life, a career, etc.: as, a budding orator.

In botany, the putting forth or producing of buds. noun

In zoology, gemmation; a mode of asexual reproduction in animals analogous to budding in plants. noun

In horticulture, a process, allied to grafting, for growing a different variety of fruit or plant from a given stock by transferring a bud with a little of the woody tissue behind it to a cleft in the bark of the stock. noun

The act or process of producing buds. noun

A process of asexual reproduction, in which a new organism or cell is formed by a protrusion of a portion of the animal or vegetable organism, the bud thus formed sometimes remaining attached to the parent stalk or cell, at other times becoming free; gemmation. See Hydroidea. noun

The act or process of ingrafting one kind of plant upon another stock by inserting a bud under the bark. noun

That is beginning to develop. adjective

Present participle of bud. verb

Reproduction of some unicellular organisms (such as yeasts) by growth and specialization followed by the separation by constriction of a part of the parent noun

Beginning to develop adjective

To form buds.

To reproduce by splitting off buds.

To begin to grow, or to issue from a stock in the manner of a bud, as a horn.

To be like a bud in respect to youth and freshness, or growth and promise.

To put forth as a bud.

To graft by inserting a bud under the bark of another tree.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Budding

The word "budding" in example sentences

Imagine display things unsuited for a entire family upon network TV in budding time! ❋ Admin (2009)

Th�ey also found retroviral particles budding from the infected cells. ❋ Unknown (2008)

They also found retroviral particles budding from the infected cells. ❋ Peggy (2008)

This emerged from work with Yvonne Bissett while we were trying to identify a G1 control start similar to the one de - fined by Lee Hartwell in budding yeast. ❋ Unknown (2002)

And remember it is of first rate importance in budding, that the bud should be plump and fresh. ❋ Unknown (1872)

The lyrics rarely scratch below the surface - "Looks like Cupid just showed up," she later exults, referring to a budding romance - but Evans's voluptuous alto and unwavering conviction help compensate for the frequently lightweight sentiment. ❋ Unknown (2011)

In vain did she recall the budding resentment she had experienced upon Lady Hester's ill-considered revelation. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Brown, the visionary president of the Earth Policy Institute, recently called the budding green jobs sector the "great growth industry of the 21st industry." ❋ Unknown (2008)

Muslim groups that critics say is lending credibility to what has been identified as a budding support network for Islamist extremists, including front groups for the radical Muslim Brotherhood. ❋ Unknown (2008)

"Gemmation" -- that is, the budding out of daughter cells (b) from various parts of the gradually enlarging mother cell. ❋ Unknown (N/A)

The process is somewhat different from ordinary fission and is called budding (Fig.  37, _B_). ❋ Douglas Houghton Campbell (N/A)

The Venetian School of Art has been divided by Ruskin into three parts: the first begins with Jacopo Bellini, and this part might be referred to as the budding period. ❋ Elbert Hubbard (1885)

If he told us to look at the trees in spring; for, as surely as their budding was a sign that summer was nigh, so was the coming to pass of these terrible woes a sign that something was nigh, which he called the Kingdom of God. ❋ Charles Kingsley (1847)

This might very well be called the budding forth of the horn of the house of ❋ Unknown (1721)

They usually reproduce asexually, by a process called budding, where a part of the cell is pinched off and becomes a new cell, identical to the original. ❋ Editors (2010)

Cross Reference for Budding

What does budding mean?

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