mushroom
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++mush·room1 /ˈmʌʃruːm, -rʊm/ ●●● S3 noun [countable]
DFone of several kinds of fungus with stems and round tops, some of which can be eaten 蘑菇 → toadstool mushroom soup 蘑菇汤 → magic mushroom →5 see picture at 见图 vegetable1
Examples from the Corpus
mushroom• mushroom soup• Place a cube of Gorgonzola atop each serving of polenta and mushrooms and warm under broiler.• Gibbs brought mushrooms for the fiesta.• Soak dried mushrooms in hot water to cover until soft, about 20 minutes.• He could have been right at that, when one considers the trips that hippies take after eating some types of mushroom.• Then other mushrooms began popping up.• If another living shaman eats a portion of shaman mushroom then it dissolves inside him and releases vast amounts of magic energy.• But atomic power to my generation always means that mushroom cloud.• His gaze moved along steadily until it rested on the mushrooms - chestnut mushrooms, shiitake mushrooms, field mushrooms.mushroom2 verb [intransitive] GROW/GET BIGGERto grow and develop very quickly 快速成长,迅速发展 New housing developments mushroomed on the edge of town. 城郊新住宅区雨后春笋般地冒出来。→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
mushroom• But indications are that growth is mushrooming.• So the risk from viruses certainly hasn't diminished - on the contrary, it has mushroomed.• The visible presence of corporate sponsorship has steadily mushroomed.• Countless travelers get similar surprises when flying both in the United States and abroad because of a mushrooming arrangement called code-sharing.• The problem for the future is the need to keep pace with mushrooming global population growth.• After all, it was her body that was about to mushroom, her life that was going to get derailed.• Bernstein's law practice had mushroomed in recent years.• Yet, despite the mushrooming of coffee bars in the high streets of western countries, supply still exceeds demand.• On the night interest had mushroomed to include several schools and colleges in the Lancaster area.From Longman Business Dictionarymushroommush‧room /ˈmʌʃruːm, -rʊm/ verb [intransitive] to develop very quicklyCable has mushroomed into a giant industry. —mushrooming adjectivethe mushrooming private business sector→ See Verb tableOrigin mushroom1 (1400-1500) French mousseron, from Latin mussiriomush·room1 nounmushroom2 verbChineseSyllable
one of Corpus of kinds Business with fungus several
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mushroom
mush‧room1 S3 /ˈmʌʃruːm, -rʊm/
noun [countable]
one of several kinds of fungus with stems and round tops, some of which can be eaten ⇨ toadstool:
mushroom soup ⇨ magic mushroom
mushroom2
verb [intransitive]
to grow and develop very quickly:
New housing developments mushroomed on the edge of town.
| I |
noun [countable] Date: 1400-1500
Language: French
Origin: mousseron, from Latin mussirio
Language: French
Origin: mousseron, from Latin mussirio

one of several kinds of fungus with stems and round tops, some of which can be eaten ⇨ toadstool:
| II |
verb [intransitive]to grow and develop very quickly:

usually