burgeon
burgeon 英 [ˈbɜ:dʒən] 美 [ˈbɜrdʒən]
n. 芽, 嫩枝 vt. 萌芽, 发芽 vi. 萌芽, 发芽
进行时:burgeoning 过去式:burgeoned 过去分词:burgeoned 第三人称单数:burgeons 名词复数:burgeons
- Use the verb burgeon to describe something that is growing, expanding, and flourishing. If you have a green thumb, in the spring your flower gardens may burgeon. If you don't have a green thumb, your collection of plastic plants may burgeon.
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- n. 芽, 嫩枝
- vt. 萌芽, 发芽
- vi. 萌芽, 发芽
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1. There is every indication, as unemployment climbs and cuts are made, that the sense of alienation will burgeon
有可靠迹象表明,由于公司裁员,失业率攀升以及俱乐部等服务项目的削减,社会排斥感将继续扩散。
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2. The seed of friendship and cooperation we sow today will burgeon and harvest in the future and China-US partnership of cooperation will definitely enjoy a better tomorrow.
我们今天播下的友好合作种子一定能够生根发芽、开花结果,中美合作伙伴关系一定能够迎来更加美好的明天。
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3. Especially among the vast amounts of people with primary education level ideology of democracy, law and profession, modern personality with self-respect and self - reliance have come to burgeon.
特别是在广大初级教育水平者中,民主精神、法律意识、职业精神以及自尊自强的“现代人格”开始萌芽。
- burgeon (v.) early 14c., "grow, sprout, blossom," from Anglo-French burjuner, Old French borjoner "to bud, sprout," from borjon "a bud, shoot, pimple" (Modern French bourgeon), a word of uncertain origin. Perhaps from Vulgar Latin *burrionem (nominative *burrio), from Late Latin burra "flock of wool," itself of uncertain origin. Some sources (Kitchin, Gamillscheg) say either the French word or the Vulgar Latin one is from Germanic (compare Old High German burjan "to raise, lift up"). The English verb is perhaps instead a native development from burjoin (n.) "a bud" (c. 1300), from Old French. According to OED, it died out by 18c. except as a technical term in gardening, and was revived early 19c. in poetry. Related: Burgeoned; burgeoning.
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