19 Metaphors for budded

" "Is there a worm i' the bud?" "There may be one at the root; my top is green and flourishing, isn't it?"

" Bud's was the tone a teacher uses to encourage a defective child.

In which buds are the flower-clusters? Are there flowers and leaves in the same buds?

When young the buds are a vivid red, changing to orange-yellow, and when fully expanded the flowers are creamy-white.

Bud is a rosebud!" He smiled, frowned, and tugged at his moustache as Bud appeared with some more hot water.

The tiny buds in the centre are our budding intellects.

The buds become perfect polyps, and then they, too, begin to bud.

The unexpanded terminal bud is a delicate article of food.

Which buds are the strongest?

Roots are not always given, but buds of trees is a frequent answer.

"Bud and Dandy were a corking little team.

The buds that spring from the inner angle of the leaf with the stem are axillary buds; those that crown the stems are terminal.

A bud, then, is an undeveloped branch.

Bud was tellin' me to read up on forestry.

A process of budding which in the yeast plant and in mosses is merely vegetatively reproductive, in fungi becomes truly reproductive, namely, the buds are special cells arising from other special cells of the hyphæ.

While describing his misadventure he decided that Bud could not be a party to the father's crime.

These rods and cones are to be regarded as the peculiar modes of termination of the nerve filaments of the eye, just as the taste buds are the modes of termination of the nerve of taste in the tongue, and just as the touch corpuscles are the terminations of the nerves in the skin.

They must define a bud. Ask them what the bud would have become the next season, if it had been allowed to develop.

The rebels might spy them, might surround them, but they need not starvethe buds were food, the bushes refreshment, the pellucid pools drink and life.

19 Metaphors for  budded