The bud develops for 9 months, before it becomes a gigantic orange to red flower.
The bud develops into an infant, which in due course is vomited into the world.
In hydra, a bud develops as an outgrowth due to repeated cell division at one specific site.
Adventitious roots and buds must develop in tissue culture propagation of plants.
The abnormal buds develop during summer and the bud is wholly replaced by the gall growth.
And in Vitis vinifera the terminal bud develops into tendrils.
These buds haven't developed and now they won't, because these plants work fast.
But those little buds never develop and if they would the plant would have a fuller shape and be less leggy.
Like the apical meristem, axillary buds can develop into a stem or flower.
These taste buds develop during fetal development.