How to use in-sentence of “budding”:
+ It is a parable about a Common figfig tree which does not produce fruit, unlike the parable of the budding fig tree.
+ It is when a small part of a plant or animal breaks off and then, while they are separated from their “mother”, they start to grow until both the “parent” and the “offspring” are the same size and both are capable of budding again.
+ The Parable of the Budding Fig Tree is a parable of Jesus.
+ He is a budding singer and pianist, but he enjoys “playing” the piano more than he enjoys practicing.
+ Slight differences in the method of budding produce great variations in the form of the colonies.
+ The parable compares the Kingdom of God with a budding fig tree, the opposite of the barren fig tree.
+ With budding a small sponge grows on the parent; when it is done growing, it simply “falls off”.
+ Simple bags, called vesicles or vacuoles, are sometimes made by budding off other membranes, just like how children make bubbles with their toys.

