burgeon in a sentence
pronunciation: [ [ 'bə:dʒən ] ]
Examples
- He notes that, while the surplus is supposed to $ 79 billion for this fiscal year, it may burgeon to $ 117 billion for next year.
- Analysts expect the use of high-speed Internet access to burgeon to 28.8 million users in the U . S . within a few years.
- As the prescription drug market burgeons and more drug stores compete to hire pharmacists, the number of applications to the country's pharmaceutical colleges is dropping.
- Isolated severe storms may also burgeon in west Texas on Monday afternoon and evening near the boundary between humid Gulf air and mountain-dry air from the Rockies.
- Farther south, widely separated showers and thunderstorms will burgeon along a cool front stretching west-southwest from the Carolinas to southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi.
- Farther south, scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms will burgeon over Utah and western Colorado as a disturbance traveling in the southern branch of the jet stream destabilizes the atmosphere.
- Meanwhile, the seeds of an ice storm will burgeon across interior New England as moisture streaming inland from the Atlantic glides over cold air holding tenaciously near the ground.
- President Fidel Ramos of the Philippines, who is visiting Britain, spoke Tuesday night of his resolve to alleviate poverty in the east Asian nation as its economy burgeons.
- There is plenty of food for the rebels _ Chechnya burgeons with fresh produce in summertime _ and the separatists bring new loads in each day by truck or on foot.
- Meanwhile, scattered, slow-moving showers and thunderstorms will burgeon over the Great Basin and the high northern Plains of the western Dakotas, northeastern Montana and northern Wyoming.