The garden was so burgeon.
The number of new businesses in the city started to burgeon after the introduction of favorable tax incentives.
The tech industry continues to burgeon with new startups and innovations each year.
You can use burgeon to describe something rapidly growing or expanding, such as a business, population, or relationship. For example, "The tech industry continues to burgeon with new startups emerging every day."
The verb in the sentence is "give." It is the action that the subject (you) is being asked to perform.
That sentence makes no sense, but, "Give you that disk, please."
The simple predicate is "Give", as it is the main verb that indicates the action being performed in the sentence.
His popularity as a singer began to burgeon as more people were exposed to his music. The word burgeon is a verb.
The tech industry continues to burgeon with new startups and innovations each year.
The town burgeoned into a city.
no
You can use burgeon to describe something rapidly growing or expanding, such as a business, population, or relationship. For example, "The tech industry continues to burgeon with new startups emerging every day."
A burgeon is a bud, sprout, or shoot.
shrink
To bud. See Bourgeon.
Grant was the modern man emerging; beyond him, ready to come on stage, was the great age of steel and machinery, of crowded cities and a restless burgeoning vitality.-Bruce Cattonburgeoning speaks of the city, growing and ready to flourish with the birth of the new age of steel and machinery
Adding the suffixes ed or ing, for example, gives "burgeoned" and "burgeoning". I can't think of a prefix for burgeon - can anyone else?
Reunion Island in Indian Ocean.
bloom, blossom, flower, effloresce, boost, enlarge