ramification

Etymology
From, or its source,.

Noun

 * 1)  A branching-out, the act or result of developing branches; specifically the divergence of the stem and limbs of a plant into smaller ones, or of similar developments in blood vessels, anatomical structures etc.
 * 2)  An offshoot of a decision, fact etc.; a consequence or implication, especially one which complicates a situation.
 * 3)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An offshoot of a decision, fact etc.; a consequence or implication, especially one which complicates a situation.
 * 2)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An offshoot of a decision, fact etc.; a consequence or implication, especially one which complicates a situation.
 * 2)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.
 * 1)  An arrangement of branches.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: разклоняване,
 * Catalan: ramificació
 * Czech: rozvětvení
 * Dutch:, uitwaaiering
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: Verästelung,, Ramifikation
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian:, , , elágasodás, elágazódás
 * Icelandic: kvíslun, greining
 * Polish:
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish: ramificación
 * Tibetan: ཡལ་འདབ་སྒྲིག་རིམ, ཡལ་འདབ་རྒྱས་སྟངས
 * Turkish: budaklanma,
 * Ukrainian: розгалу́ження


 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Catalan: ramificació
 * Finnish: ,
 * French:
 * German: ;, ,
 * Greek: ,
 * Hungarian:, , , ,
 * Italian:
 * Norwegian:
 * Plautdietsch: Ve'astunk
 * Polish: skutek uboczny
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: ramificación
 * Tibetan: ཡན་ལག་འཕེལ་རྒྱས

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) a (criminal) network, offshoots of an (often clandestine) organization
 * , implication

Noun

 * 1) division into branches