Offshoot in a sentence as a noun

Haskell is an offshoot of ML and unreadable?

It doesn't seem, though, to be driven by technology but by its offshoot, media.

To me, it seems plausible enough for fiction that there could be some weird offshoot cult in Tibet that believed such a thing.

All of the remaining hires were just an offshoot from that initial decision as to where to locate the new team.

Even the very database this system runs on may be an offshoot of the Google BigTable paper.

Lisp was inspired by the lambda calculus which was also an offshoot of the whole mechanize maths movement.

What that has to do with rock and roll is a mystery to me, since it's an offshoot of jazz, which is alive and well and still serving as a wellspring for new music.

I just though it was an offshoot of history and literature but it seems people believe there is actually some philosophical credibility to it.

Awesome, between /b/, money launderers, the Silk Road, and its arms-dealing offshoot, bitcoin may have attracted the attention of all the scumbags on the internet!

Modern Libertarians often consider property rights to be the first principle, but older classical liberal philosophers such a Locke believed that property was an offshoot of labor.

Offshoot definitions

noun

a natural consequence of development

See also: outgrowth branch offset