"Burgeoning" means "an act of budding or sprouting", or the action of budding or sprouting in general.
Adding the suffixes ed or ing, for example, gives "burgeoned" and "burgeoning". I can't think of a prefix for burgeon - can anyone else?
stipulative definition is stipulative definition
definition feasible region definition feasible region
the two types of definition are the formal and informal definition.
It is a name, there is no definition.
His burgeoning love for theater inspired him to read all of Shakespeare's plays.
Everyone agreed that the burgeoning young writer was in truth more arrogant than talented.
The word 'burgeoning' is the present participle, present tense of the verb 'burgeon', meaning to begin to expand or grow rapidly; to flourish; to put forth young shoots. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example sentence:By the late 1980s, the computer industry was burgeoning. (verb)The burgeoning industry in China is creating difficult environmental problems. (adjective)
burgeoning
executive powerss FREAAK
The Montages and the Capulets are enemy. That could be problematic.
That hasn't happened yet. Its popularity is still growing by great burgeoning leaps and bounds.
With limited land and a burgeoning population to support, they had to either do it by conquest or trade. They elected trade.
They had limited land to support a burgeoning population, so they turned to trade.
When youβre talking about something that is growing noticeably, you might say that it is burgeoning. You can use this term literally or figuratively.
To move goods and raw materials needed for and produced by the burgeoning industrial revolution.
Its limited agricultural land and burgeoning population meant that it had to expand - by conquest or trade. They chose trade.