noun, verb, bud⋅ded, bud⋅ding.| 1. | Botany.
|
| 2. | Zoology. (in certain animals of low organization) a prominence that develops into a new individual, sometimes permanently attached to the parent and sometimes becoming detached; gemma. |
| 3. | Mycology. a small, rounded outgrowth produced from a fungus spore or cell by a process of asexual reproduction, eventually separating from the parent cell as a new individual: commonly produced by yeast and a few other fungi. |
| 4. | Anatomy. any small rounded part. |
| 5. | an immature or undeveloped person or thing. |
| 6. | to put forth or produce buds. |
| 7. | to begin to develop. |
| 8. | to be in an early stage of development. |
| 9. | to cause to bud. |
| 10. | Horticulture. to graft by inserting a single bud into the stock. |
| 11. | in the bud, in an immature or undeveloped state: a Shakespeare in the bud. Also, in bud. |
| 12. | nip in the bud, to stop (something) in the beginning of its development: The rebellion was nipped in the bud. |

t]
| 1. | Berenice, 1898–1991, U.S. photographer. |
| 2. | Edith, 1876–1957, and her sister Grace, 1878–1939, U.S. social reformers. |
| 3. | Ed⋅ville Ger⋅hardt [ed-vil gair-hahrt] , 1871–1938, U.S. orthopedist. |
| 4. | George, 1887–1995, U.S. playwright, director, and producer. |
| 5. | Jacob, 1803–79, and his son, Lyman, 1835–1922, U.S. clergymen and writers. |
| 6. | Sir John Joseph Caldwell, 1821–93, Canadian political leader: prime minister 1891–92. |
| 7. | Robert Seng⋅stake [seng-stak] , 1868–1940, U.S. newspaper publisher. |
| 8. | William (“Bud” ), 1898–1974, U.S. actor, producer, and comedian, best known as the straight man of Abbott and Costello. |
l for 1, 4, 5; poh-uh
l, pou- for 2, 3]
| 1. | Adam Clayton, Jr., 1908–72, U.S. clergyman, politician, and civil-rights leader: congressman 1945–67, 1969–71. |
| 2. | Anthony, 1905–2000, English author. |
| 3. | Cecil Frank, 1903–69, English physicist: Nobel prize 1950. |
| 4. | Co⋅lin [koh-lin, kol-in] , born 1937, U.S. general: chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff 1989–96; Secretary of State 2001–05. |
| 5. | Earl (Bud ), 1924–66, U.S. jazz pianist and composer. |
| 6. | John Wesley, 1834–1902, U.S. geologist and ethnologist. |
| 7. | Lewis Franklin, Jr., 1907–1998, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1972–87. |
| 8. | Lake, an artificial reservoir on the border of SE Utah and NE Arizona, on the Colorado River, formed by the construction of a dam (Glen Canyon Dam) (completed 1964). 186 mi. (300 km) long. |
bud
[bəd]
|
bud (bŭd)
n.
A small, rounded anatomical structure or organic part, such as a taste bud.
An asexual reproductive structure, as in yeast or a hydra, that consists of an outgrowth capable of developing into a new individual.
To put forth or cause to put forth buds.
To reproduce asexually by forming a bud.
| bud (bŭd) Pronunciation Key
Noun
Verb To form or produce a bud or buds. |
| Bud Budweiser [beer] |
| BUD Ferihegy Airport (Budapest, Hungary) |