FOOTNOTES:[1]For fuller directions in many particulars, see "Structural Botany," pp. 370-374.
[1]For fuller directions in many particulars, see "Structural Botany," pp. 370-374.
[1]For fuller directions in many particulars, see "Structural Botany," pp. 370-374.
Adans.=Adanson.Ait.Aiton.All.Allioni.Andr.Andrews.Arn.Arnott.Aub.Aublet.Bartr.Bartram.Beauv.Palisot de Beauvois.Benth.Bentham.Bernh.Bernhardi.Bigel.Jacob Bigelow.Bong.Bongard.Bonpl.Bonpland.Br.orR. Br.Robert Brown.Cass.Cassini.Cav.Cavanilles.Cham.Chamisso.Chapm.Chapman.Chois.Choisy.Clayt.Clayton.Curt.Curtis.Curt. (M. A.)M. A. Curtis.Darl.Darlington.DC.}DeCandolle.DeCand.A. DC.Alphonse DeCandolle.Desc.Descourtilz.Desf.Desfontaines.Desv.Desvaux.Dill.Dillenius.Dougl.Douglas.Duham.Duhamel.Dun.Dunal.Eat.Eaton (Amos) or D. C.Ehrh.Ehrhart.Ell.Elliott.Endl.Endlicher.Engelm.Engelmann.Engl.Engler.Fisch.Fischer.Frœl.Frœlich.Gærtn.Gærtner.Gaud.Gaudin.Gaudich.Gaudichaud.Ging.Gingins.Gmel.Gmelin.Good.Goodenough.Grev.Greville.Griseb.Grisebach.Gron.}Gronovius.Gronov.Hall.Haller.Hartm.Hartmann.Hartw.Hartweg.Harv.Harvey.Haw.Haworth.Hegelm.Hegelmaier.Hemsl.Hemsley.Herb.Herbert.Hoffm.Hoffmann.Hoffmans.Hoffmansegg.Hook.Hooker.Hook. f.J. D. Hooker.Hornem.Hornemann.Huds.Hudson.Humb.Humboldt.HBK.Humboldt, Bonpland, and Kunth.Jacq.Jacquin.Jacq. f.J. F. Jacquin.Juss.Jussieu.A. Juss.Adrien de Jussieu.Kit.Kitaibel.L.orLinn.Linnæus.Labill.Labillardiere.Lag.Lagasca.Lam.Lamarck.Ledeb.Ledebour.Lehm.Lehmann.Lesq.Lesquereux.Less.Lessing.Lestib.Lestibudois.L'Her.L'Heritier.Lindb.Lindberg.Lindh.Lindheimer.Lindl.Lindley.Lodd.Loddiges.Loud.Loudon.M. Bieb.Marschall von Bieberstein.Marsh.Marshall (Humphrey).Mart.Martius.Mast.=Masters.Maxim.Maximowicz.Meisn.}Meisner orMeissn.Meissner.Michx.orMx.Michaux.Michx. f.F. A. Michaux.Mill.Miller.Miq.Miquel.Mitch.Mitchell.Moç.Moçino.Moq.Moquin-Tandon.Moric.Moricand.Moris.Morison.Muell. Arg.J. Mueller.Muell. (F.)Ferdinand Mueller.Muhl.Muhlenberg.Murr.Murray.Naud.Naudin.Neck.Necker.Nees}Nees von Esenbeck.N. ab E.Nutt.Nuttall.Œd.Œder.Ort.Ortega.P. de Beauv.Palisot de Beauvois.Pall.Pallas.Parl.Parlatore.Pav.Pavon.Pers.Persoon.Planch.Planchon.Pluk.Plukenet.Plum.Plumier.Poir.Poiret.Radlk.Radlkofer.Raf.Rafinesque.Red.Redouté.Reichenb.Reichenbach.Rich.L. C. Richard.Rich. f.orA.Achille Richard.Richards.Richardson.Ridd.Riddell.Rœm. & Schult.Rœmer & Schultes.Rottb.Rottbœll.Rupr.Ruprecht.St. Hil.Saint-Hilaire.Salisb.Salisbury.Schk.Schkuhr.Schlecht.Schlechtendal.Schrad.Schrader.Schreb.Schreber.Schwein.Schweinitz.Scop.Scopoli.Spreng.Sprengel.Sternb.Sternberg.Steud.Steudel.Sull.Sullivant.Thunb.Thunberg.Torr.Torrey.Tourn.Tournefort.Trautv.Trautvetter.Trin.Trinius.Tuck.Tuckerman.Vaill.Vaillant.Vent.Ventenat.Vill.Villars.Wahl.Wahlenberg.Walds.Waldstein.Wall.Wallich.Wallr.Wallroth.Walp.Walpers.Walt.Walter.Wang.Wangenheim.Wats.Sereno Watson, unless other initials are given.Wedd.Weddell.Wendl.Wendland.Wiks.Wikstrom.Willd.Willdenow.Wulf.Wulfen.Zucc.Zuccarini.Zuccag.Zuccagini.
ORDICTIONARY OF THE PRINCIPAL TERMS IN DESCRIPTIVE BOTANY, COMBINED WITH AN INDEX.
For the convenience of unclassical students, the commoner Latin and Greek words (or their equivalents in English form) which enter into the composition of botanical names, as well as of technical terms, are added to this Glossary. The numbers refer to pages.
For the convenience of unclassical students, the commoner Latin and Greek words (or their equivalents in English form) which enter into the composition of botanical names, as well as of technical terms, are added to this Glossary. The numbers refer to pages.
A, at the beginning of words of Greek derivation, commonly signifies a negative, or the absence of something; asapetalous, without petals;aphyllous, leafless, &c. In words beginning with a vowel, the prefix isan; asanantherous, destitute of anther.Abnormal, contrary to the usual or the natural structure.Aboriginal, original in the strictest sense; same as indigenous.Abortive, imperfectly formed, or rudimentary.Abortion, the imperfect formation or the non-formation of some part.Abrupt, suddenly terminating; as, for instance,Abruptly pinnate, pinnate without an odd leaflet at the end,58.Acantho-, spiny.Acaulescent(acaulis), apparently stemless; the proper stem, bearing the leaves and flowers, being very short or subterranean.Accessory, something additional; asAccessory buds,30,31;Accessory fruits,118.Accrescent, growing larger after flowering.Accrete, grown to.Accumbent, lying against a thing. The cotyledons are accumbent when they lie with their edges against the radicle,128.Acephalous, headless.Acerose, needle-shaped, as the leaves of Pines.Acetabuliform, saucer-shaped.Achænium, orAchenium(pluralachenia), a one-seeded, seed-like fruit,120.Achlamydeous(flower), without floral envelopes,86.Acicular, needle-shaped; more slender than acerose.Acinaciform, scimitar-shaped, like some bean-pods.Acines, the separate grains of a fruit, such as the raspberry.Acorn, the nut of the Oak,122.Acotyledonous, destitute of cotyledons or seed-leaves.Acrogenous, growing from the apex, as the stems of Ferns and Mosses.Acrogens, orAcrogenous Plants, a name for the vascular cryptogamous plants,156.Aculeate, armed with prickles, i. e.aculei; as the Rose and Brier.Aculeolate, armed with small prickles, or slightly prickly.Acuminate, taper-pointed,54.Acute, merely sharp-pointed, or ending in a point less than a right angle,54.Adelphous(stamens), joined in a fraternity (adelphia); seemonadelphous, &c.Aden, Greek for gland. SoAdenophorous, gland-bearing.Adherent, sticking to, or more commonly, growing fast to another body.Adnate, literally, growing fast to, born adherent,95. The anther is adnate when fixed by its whole length to the filament or its prolongation,101.Adnation, the state of being adnate,94.Adpressedorappressed, brought into contact with, but not united.Adscendent,ascendent, orascending, rising gradually upwards,39.Adsurgent, orassurgent, same as ascending,39.Adventitious, out of the proper or usual place; e. g.Adventitious buds,30.Adventive, applied to foreign plants accidentally or sparingly introduced into a country, but hardly to be called naturalized.Æquilateral, equal-sided; opposed to oblique.Aerial roots, &c.,36.Æruginous, verdigris-colored.Aestival, produced in summer.Aestivation, the arrangement of parts in a flower-bud,97.Agamous, sexless.Aggregate fruits,118.Agrestis, growing in fields.Air-cellsorAir-passages, spaces in the tissue of leaves and some stems,131.Air-Plants,36.AkeneorAkenium,120.Ala(plural,alæ), a wing; the side-petals of a papilionaceous corolla,92.Alabastrum, a flower-bud.Alar, situated in the forks of a stem.Alate, winged.Albescent, whitish, or turning white.Albus, Latin for white.Albumenof the seed, nourishing matter stored up with the embryo,21,127.Albumen, a vegetable product, of four elements.Albuminous(seeds), furnished with albumen,21.Alburnum, young wood, sap-wood,142.Alliaceous, with odor of garlic.Allogamous, close fertilization.Alpestrine, subalpine.Alpine, belonging to high mountains above the limit of forests.Alternate(leaves), one after another,29,67. Petals arealternatewith the sepals, or stamens with the petals, when they stand over the intervals between them,82.Alveolate, honeycomb-like.Ament, the scaly spike of trees like the Birch and Willow,75.Amentaceous, catkin-like, or catkin-bearing.Amorphous, shapeless, without any definite form.Amphicarpous, producing two kinds of fruit.Amphigastrium(plural,amphigastria), a peculiar stipule-like leaf of Liverworts.Amphitropousovules or seeds,111.Amphora, a pitcher-shaped organ.Amplectant, embracing.Amplexicaul(leaves), clasping the stem by the base.Ampullaceous, swelling out like a bottle or bladder (ampulla).Amylaceous,Amyloid, composed of starch (amylum), or starch-like.Anandrous, without stamens.Anantherous, without anthers.Ananthous, destitute of flowers; flowerless.Anastomosing, forming a net-work (anastomosis), as the veins of leaves,50.Anatropousovules or seeds,111.Ancipital(anceps), two-edged.Andrœcium, a name for the stamens taken together,98.Andro-diœcious, flowers staminate on one plant, perfect on another.Androgynous, having both staminate and pistillate flowers in the same cluster.Androphore, a column of united stamens, as in a Mallow.Androus, orAnder,andra,andrum, Greek in compounds for male, or stamens.Anemophilous, wind-loving, said of wind-fertilizable flowers,113.Anfractuose, bent hither and thither as the anthers of the Squash, &c.Angiospermæ,Angiospermous, with seeds formed in an ovary or pericarp,109.Angular divergenceof leaves,69.Anisos, unequal.Anisomerous, parts unequal in number.Anisopetalous, with unequal petals.Anisophyllous, the leaves unequal in the pairs.Annual(plant), flowering and fruiting the year it is raised from the seed, and then dying,37.Annular, in the form of a ring, or forming a circle.Annulate, marked by rings; or furnished with anAnnulus, or ring, like that of the spore-case of most Ferns. In Mosses it is a ring of cells placed between the mouth of the spore-case and the lid in many species.Annotinous, yearly, or in yearly growths.Anterior, in the blossom, is the part next the bract, i. e. external; while the posterior side is that next the axis of inflorescence. Thus, in the Pea, &c., the keel isanterior, and the standardposterior,96.Anthela, an open paniculate cyme.Anther, the essential part of the stamen, which contains the pollen,14,80,101.Antheridium(pluralantheridia), the organ in Cryptogams which answers to the anther of Flowering Plants,150.Antheriferous, anther-bearing.Anthesis, the period or the act of the expansion of a flower.Anthocarpus(fruits),118.Anthophore, a stipe between calyx and corolla,113.Anthos, Greek for flower; in composition,Monanthous, one-flowered, &c.Anticous, same as anterior.Antrorse, directed upwards or forwards.Apetalous, destitute of petals,86.Aphyllous, leafless.Apical, belonging to the apex or point.Apiculate, pointleted; tipped with a small point.Apocarpous(pistils), when the several pistils of the same flower are separate.Apophysis, any irregular swelling; the enlargement at the base of the spore-case of the Umbrella-Moss.Apothecium, the fructification of Lichens,171.Appendage, any superadded part.Appendiculate, provided with appendages.Appressed, close pressed to the stem, &c.Apricus, growing in dry and sunny places.Apterous, wingless.Aquatic(Aquatilis), living or growing in water; applied to plants whether growing under water, or with all but the base raised out of it.Arachnoid,Araneose, cobwebby; clothed with, or consisting of, soft downy fibres.Arboreous,Arborescent, tree-like, in size or form,39.Arboretum, a collection of trees.Archegonium(pluralarchegonia), the organ in Mosses, &c., which is analogous to the pistil of Flowering Plants.Arcuate, bent or curved like a bow.Arenose(Arenarius), growing in sand.Areolate, marked out into little spaces orareolæ.Argenteous, orArgentate, silvery-like.Argillose, growing in clay.Argos, Greek for pure white;ArgophyllousorArgyrophyllous, white-leaved, &c.Argutus, acutely dentate.Arillate(seeds) furnished with an aril.Arilliform, aril-like.Arillus, orAril, a fleshy growth from base of a seed,126.Aristate, awned, i. e. furnished with anarista, like the beard of Barley, &c.,54.Aristulate, diminutive of the last; short-awned.Arrect, brought into upright position.Arrow-shapedorArrow-headed, same assagittate,53.Articulated, jointed; furnished with joints orarticulations, where it separates or inclines to do so.Articulated leaves,57.Artificial Classification,181.Ascending(stems, &c.),39; (seeds or ovules),110.Ascidium, a pitcher-shaped body, like leaves of Sarracenia.Ascus(asci), a sac, the spore-case of Lichens and some Fungi.Aspergilliform, shaped like the brush used to sprinkle holy water; as the stigmas of many Grasses.Asperous, rough to touch.Assimilation,144,147.Assurgent, same as ascending,39.AtropousorAtropal(ovules), same as orthotropous.Aurantiacous, orange-colored.Aureous, golden.Auriculate, furnished withauriclesor ear-like appendages,53.Autogamy, self-fertilization,115.Awl-shaped, sharp-pointed from a broader base,61.Awn, the bristle or beard of Barley, Oats, &c.; or any similar appendage.AwnedorAwn-pointed, furnished with an awn or long bristle-shaped tip,54.Axil, the angle on the upper side between a leaf and the stem,13.Axile, belonging to the axis, or occupying the axis.Axillary(buds, &c.), occurring in an axil,27.Axis, the central line of any body; the organ round which others are attached; the root and stem.AscendingandDescending Axis,38.
A, at the beginning of words of Greek derivation, commonly signifies a negative, or the absence of something; asapetalous, without petals;aphyllous, leafless, &c. In words beginning with a vowel, the prefix isan; asanantherous, destitute of anther.
Abnormal, contrary to the usual or the natural structure.
Aboriginal, original in the strictest sense; same as indigenous.
Abortive, imperfectly formed, or rudimentary.
Abortion, the imperfect formation or the non-formation of some part.
Abrupt, suddenly terminating; as, for instance,
Abruptly pinnate, pinnate without an odd leaflet at the end,58.
Acantho-, spiny.
Acaulescent(acaulis), apparently stemless; the proper stem, bearing the leaves and flowers, being very short or subterranean.
Accessory, something additional; asAccessory buds,30,31;Accessory fruits,118.
Accrescent, growing larger after flowering.
Accrete, grown to.
Accumbent, lying against a thing. The cotyledons are accumbent when they lie with their edges against the radicle,128.
Acephalous, headless.
Acerose, needle-shaped, as the leaves of Pines.
Acetabuliform, saucer-shaped.
Achænium, orAchenium(pluralachenia), a one-seeded, seed-like fruit,120.
Achlamydeous(flower), without floral envelopes,86.
Acicular, needle-shaped; more slender than acerose.
Acinaciform, scimitar-shaped, like some bean-pods.
Acines, the separate grains of a fruit, such as the raspberry.
Acorn, the nut of the Oak,122.
Acotyledonous, destitute of cotyledons or seed-leaves.
Acrogenous, growing from the apex, as the stems of Ferns and Mosses.Acrogens, orAcrogenous Plants, a name for the vascular cryptogamous plants,156.
Aculeate, armed with prickles, i. e.aculei; as the Rose and Brier.
Aculeolate, armed with small prickles, or slightly prickly.
Acuminate, taper-pointed,54.
Acute, merely sharp-pointed, or ending in a point less than a right angle,54.
Adelphous(stamens), joined in a fraternity (adelphia); seemonadelphous, &c.
Aden, Greek for gland. SoAdenophorous, gland-bearing.
Adherent, sticking to, or more commonly, growing fast to another body.
Adnate, literally, growing fast to, born adherent,95. The anther is adnate when fixed by its whole length to the filament or its prolongation,101.
Adnation, the state of being adnate,94.
Adpressedorappressed, brought into contact with, but not united.
Adscendent,ascendent, orascending, rising gradually upwards,39.
Adsurgent, orassurgent, same as ascending,39.
Adventitious, out of the proper or usual place; e. g.Adventitious buds,30.
Adventive, applied to foreign plants accidentally or sparingly introduced into a country, but hardly to be called naturalized.
Æquilateral, equal-sided; opposed to oblique.
Aerial roots, &c.,36.
Æruginous, verdigris-colored.
Aestival, produced in summer.
Aestivation, the arrangement of parts in a flower-bud,97.
Agamous, sexless.
Aggregate fruits,118.
Agrestis, growing in fields.
Air-cellsorAir-passages, spaces in the tissue of leaves and some stems,131.
Air-Plants,36.
AkeneorAkenium,120.
Ala(plural,alæ), a wing; the side-petals of a papilionaceous corolla,92.
Alabastrum, a flower-bud.
Alar, situated in the forks of a stem.
Alate, winged.
Albescent, whitish, or turning white.
Albus, Latin for white.
Albumenof the seed, nourishing matter stored up with the embryo,21,127.
Albumen, a vegetable product, of four elements.
Albuminous(seeds), furnished with albumen,21.
Alburnum, young wood, sap-wood,142.
Alliaceous, with odor of garlic.
Allogamous, close fertilization.
Alpestrine, subalpine.
Alpine, belonging to high mountains above the limit of forests.
Alternate(leaves), one after another,29,67. Petals arealternatewith the sepals, or stamens with the petals, when they stand over the intervals between them,82.
Alveolate, honeycomb-like.
Ament, the scaly spike of trees like the Birch and Willow,75.
Amentaceous, catkin-like, or catkin-bearing.
Amorphous, shapeless, without any definite form.
Amphicarpous, producing two kinds of fruit.
Amphigastrium(plural,amphigastria), a peculiar stipule-like leaf of Liverworts.
Amphitropousovules or seeds,111.
Amphora, a pitcher-shaped organ.
Amplectant, embracing.Amplexicaul(leaves), clasping the stem by the base.
Ampullaceous, swelling out like a bottle or bladder (ampulla).
Amylaceous,Amyloid, composed of starch (amylum), or starch-like.
Anandrous, without stamens.
Anantherous, without anthers.
Ananthous, destitute of flowers; flowerless.
Anastomosing, forming a net-work (anastomosis), as the veins of leaves,50.
Anatropousovules or seeds,111.
Ancipital(anceps), two-edged.
Andrœcium, a name for the stamens taken together,98.
Andro-diœcious, flowers staminate on one plant, perfect on another.
Androgynous, having both staminate and pistillate flowers in the same cluster.
Androphore, a column of united stamens, as in a Mallow.
Androus, orAnder,andra,andrum, Greek in compounds for male, or stamens.
Anemophilous, wind-loving, said of wind-fertilizable flowers,113.
Anfractuose, bent hither and thither as the anthers of the Squash, &c.
Angiospermæ,Angiospermous, with seeds formed in an ovary or pericarp,109.
Angular divergenceof leaves,69.
Anisos, unequal.Anisomerous, parts unequal in number.Anisopetalous, with unequal petals.Anisophyllous, the leaves unequal in the pairs.
Annual(plant), flowering and fruiting the year it is raised from the seed, and then dying,37.
Annular, in the form of a ring, or forming a circle.
Annulate, marked by rings; or furnished with an
Annulus, or ring, like that of the spore-case of most Ferns. In Mosses it is a ring of cells placed between the mouth of the spore-case and the lid in many species.
Annotinous, yearly, or in yearly growths.
Anterior, in the blossom, is the part next the bract, i. e. external; while the posterior side is that next the axis of inflorescence. Thus, in the Pea, &c., the keel isanterior, and the standardposterior,96.
Anthela, an open paniculate cyme.
Anther, the essential part of the stamen, which contains the pollen,14,80,101.
Antheridium(pluralantheridia), the organ in Cryptogams which answers to the anther of Flowering Plants,150.
Antheriferous, anther-bearing.
Anthesis, the period or the act of the expansion of a flower.
Anthocarpus(fruits),118.
Anthophore, a stipe between calyx and corolla,113.
Anthos, Greek for flower; in composition,Monanthous, one-flowered, &c.
Anticous, same as anterior.
Antrorse, directed upwards or forwards.
Apetalous, destitute of petals,86.
Aphyllous, leafless.
Apical, belonging to the apex or point.
Apiculate, pointleted; tipped with a small point.
Apocarpous(pistils), when the several pistils of the same flower are separate.
Apophysis, any irregular swelling; the enlargement at the base of the spore-case of the Umbrella-Moss.
Apothecium, the fructification of Lichens,171.
Appendage, any superadded part.Appendiculate, provided with appendages.
Appressed, close pressed to the stem, &c.
Apricus, growing in dry and sunny places.
Apterous, wingless.
Aquatic(Aquatilis), living or growing in water; applied to plants whether growing under water, or with all but the base raised out of it.
Arachnoid,Araneose, cobwebby; clothed with, or consisting of, soft downy fibres.
Arboreous,Arborescent, tree-like, in size or form,39.
Arboretum, a collection of trees.
Archegonium(pluralarchegonia), the organ in Mosses, &c., which is analogous to the pistil of Flowering Plants.
Arcuate, bent or curved like a bow.
Arenose(Arenarius), growing in sand.
Areolate, marked out into little spaces orareolæ.
Argenteous, orArgentate, silvery-like.
Argillose, growing in clay.
Argos, Greek for pure white;ArgophyllousorArgyrophyllous, white-leaved, &c.
Argutus, acutely dentate.
Arillate(seeds) furnished with an aril.
Arilliform, aril-like.
Arillus, orAril, a fleshy growth from base of a seed,126.
Aristate, awned, i. e. furnished with anarista, like the beard of Barley, &c.,54.
Aristulate, diminutive of the last; short-awned.
Arrect, brought into upright position.
Arrow-shapedorArrow-headed, same assagittate,53.
Articulated, jointed; furnished with joints orarticulations, where it separates or inclines to do so.Articulated leaves,57.
Artificial Classification,181.
Ascending(stems, &c.),39; (seeds or ovules),110.
Ascidium, a pitcher-shaped body, like leaves of Sarracenia.
Ascus(asci), a sac, the spore-case of Lichens and some Fungi.
Aspergilliform, shaped like the brush used to sprinkle holy water; as the stigmas of many Grasses.
Asperous, rough to touch.
Assimilation,144,147.
Assurgent, same as ascending,39.
AtropousorAtropal(ovules), same as orthotropous.
Aurantiacous, orange-colored.
Aureous, golden.
Auriculate, furnished withauriclesor ear-like appendages,53.
Autogamy, self-fertilization,115.
Awl-shaped, sharp-pointed from a broader base,61.
Awn, the bristle or beard of Barley, Oats, &c.; or any similar appendage.
AwnedorAwn-pointed, furnished with an awn or long bristle-shaped tip,54.
Axil, the angle on the upper side between a leaf and the stem,13.
Axile, belonging to the axis, or occupying the axis.
Axillary(buds, &c.), occurring in an axil,27.
Axis, the central line of any body; the organ round which others are attached; the root and stem.AscendingandDescending Axis,38.
Baccate, berried, berry-like, of a pulpy nature like a berry (bacca).Badius, chestnut-colored.Banner, seeStandard,92.Barbate, bearded; bearing tufts, spots, or lines of hairs.Barbed, furnished with abarbor double hook; as the apex of the bristle on the fruit of Echinospermum (Stickseed), &c.Barbellate, said of the bristles of the pappus of some Compositæ when beset with short, stiff hairs, longer than when denticulate, but shorter than when plumose.Barbellulate, diminutive of barbellate.Bark, the covering of a stem outside of the wood,138,140.Basal, belonging or attached to theBase, that extremity of any organ by which it is attached to its support.Basifixed, attached by its base.Bast,Bast-fibres,134.Beaked, ending in a prolonged narrow tip.Bearded, seebarbate.Beardis sometimes used for awn, more commonly for long or stiff hairs of any sort.Bell-shaped, of the shape of a bell, as the corolla of Harebell,90.Berry, a fruit pulpy or juicy throughout, as a grape,119.Bi-(orBis), in compound words, twice; asBiarticulate, twice-jointed, or two-jointed; separating into two pieces.Biauriculate, having two ears, as the leaf in fig.126.Bicallose, having two callosities or harder spots.Bicarinate, two-keeled.Bicipital(Biceps), two-headed; dividing into two parts.Biconjugate, twice paired, as when a petiole forks twice.Bidentate, having two teeth (not twice or doubly dentate).Biennial, of two years' continuance; springing from the seed one season, flowering and dying the next,38.Bifarious, two-ranked; arranged in two rows.Bifid, two-cleft to about the middle.Bifoliolate, a compound leaf of two leaflets,59.Bifurcate, twice forked; or more commonly, forked into two branches.Bijugate, bearing two pairs (of leaflets, &c.).Bilabiate, two-lipped, as the corolla of Labiatæ.Bilamellate, of two plates (lamellæ), as the stigma of Mimulus.Bilobed, the same as two-lobed.Bilocellate, when a cell is divided into twolocelli.Bilocular, two-celled; as most anthers, the pod of Foxglove, &c.Binary, in twos.Binate, in couples, two together.Bipartite, the Latin form of two-parted.Binodal, of two nodes.Binomial, of two words, as the name of genus and species taken together,180.Bipalmate, twice palmately divided.Biparous, bearing two.Bipinnate(leaf), twice pinnate,58.Bipinnatifid, twice pinnatifid,57.Bipinnatisect, twice pinnately divided.Biplicate, twice folded together.Biserial, orBiseriate, occupying two rows, one within the other.Biserrate, doubly serrate, as when the teeth of a leaf are themselves serrate.Bisexual, having both stamens and pistil.Biternate, twice ternate; i. e. principal divisions three, each bearing three leaflets,59.Bladdery, thin and inflated.Bladeof a leaf, its expanded portion,49.Bloom, the whitish powder on some fruits, leaves, &c.Boat-shaped, concave within and keeled without, in shape like a small boat.Borderof corolla, &c.,89.Brachiate, with opposite branches at right angles to each other.Brachy-, short, asBrachycarpous, short-fruited, &c.Bract(Bractea), the leaf of an inflorescence. Specially, the bract is the small leaf or scale from the axil of which a flower or its pedicel proceeds,73.Bracteate, furnished with bracts.Bracteolate, furnished with bractlets.Bracteose, with numerous or conspicuous bracts.Bractlet(Bracteola), orBracteole, is a bract seatedonthe pedicel or flower-stalk,73.Branch,Branching,27.Breathing-pores,144.Bristles, stiff, sharp hairs, or any very slender bodies of similar appearance.Bristly, beset with bristles.Bristle-pointed,54.Brunneous, brown.Brush-shaped, seeaspergilliform.Bryology, that part of botany which relates to Mosses.Bryophyta,Bryophytes,163.Bud, a branch in its earliest or undeveloped state,27.Bud-scales,63.Bulb, a leaf-bud with fleshy scales, usually subterranean,46.Bulbils, diminutive bulbs.Bulbiferous, bearing or producing bulbs.Bulboseorbulbous, bulb-like in shape, &c.Bulblets, small bulbs, borne above ground,46.Bulb-scales,46.Bullate, appearing as if blistered or bladdery (frombulla, a bubble).Byssaceous, composed of fine flax-like threads.
Baccate, berried, berry-like, of a pulpy nature like a berry (bacca).
Badius, chestnut-colored.
Banner, seeStandard,92.
Barbate, bearded; bearing tufts, spots, or lines of hairs.
Barbed, furnished with abarbor double hook; as the apex of the bristle on the fruit of Echinospermum (Stickseed), &c.
Barbellate, said of the bristles of the pappus of some Compositæ when beset with short, stiff hairs, longer than when denticulate, but shorter than when plumose.
Barbellulate, diminutive of barbellate.
Bark, the covering of a stem outside of the wood,138,140.
Basal, belonging or attached to the
Base, that extremity of any organ by which it is attached to its support.
Basifixed, attached by its base.
Bast,Bast-fibres,134.
Beaked, ending in a prolonged narrow tip.
Bearded, seebarbate.Beardis sometimes used for awn, more commonly for long or stiff hairs of any sort.
Bell-shaped, of the shape of a bell, as the corolla of Harebell,90.
Berry, a fruit pulpy or juicy throughout, as a grape,119.
Bi-(orBis), in compound words, twice; as
Biarticulate, twice-jointed, or two-jointed; separating into two pieces.
Biauriculate, having two ears, as the leaf in fig.126.
Bicallose, having two callosities or harder spots.
Bicarinate, two-keeled.
Bicipital(Biceps), two-headed; dividing into two parts.
Biconjugate, twice paired, as when a petiole forks twice.
Bidentate, having two teeth (not twice or doubly dentate).
Biennial, of two years' continuance; springing from the seed one season, flowering and dying the next,38.
Bifarious, two-ranked; arranged in two rows.
Bifid, two-cleft to about the middle.
Bifoliolate, a compound leaf of two leaflets,59.
Bifurcate, twice forked; or more commonly, forked into two branches.
Bijugate, bearing two pairs (of leaflets, &c.).
Bilabiate, two-lipped, as the corolla of Labiatæ.
Bilamellate, of two plates (lamellæ), as the stigma of Mimulus.
Bilobed, the same as two-lobed.
Bilocellate, when a cell is divided into twolocelli.
Bilocular, two-celled; as most anthers, the pod of Foxglove, &c.
Binary, in twos.
Binate, in couples, two together.Bipartite, the Latin form of two-parted.
Binodal, of two nodes.
Binomial, of two words, as the name of genus and species taken together,180.
Bipalmate, twice palmately divided.
Biparous, bearing two.
Bipinnate(leaf), twice pinnate,58.Bipinnatifid, twice pinnatifid,57.
Bipinnatisect, twice pinnately divided.
Biplicate, twice folded together.
Biserial, orBiseriate, occupying two rows, one within the other.
Biserrate, doubly serrate, as when the teeth of a leaf are themselves serrate.
Bisexual, having both stamens and pistil.
Biternate, twice ternate; i. e. principal divisions three, each bearing three leaflets,59.
Bladdery, thin and inflated.
Bladeof a leaf, its expanded portion,49.
Bloom, the whitish powder on some fruits, leaves, &c.
Boat-shaped, concave within and keeled without, in shape like a small boat.
Borderof corolla, &c.,89.
Brachiate, with opposite branches at right angles to each other.
Brachy-, short, asBrachycarpous, short-fruited, &c.
Bract(Bractea), the leaf of an inflorescence. Specially, the bract is the small leaf or scale from the axil of which a flower or its pedicel proceeds,73.
Bracteate, furnished with bracts.
Bracteolate, furnished with bractlets.
Bracteose, with numerous or conspicuous bracts.
Bractlet(Bracteola), orBracteole, is a bract seatedonthe pedicel or flower-stalk,73.
Branch,Branching,27.
Breathing-pores,144.
Bristles, stiff, sharp hairs, or any very slender bodies of similar appearance.
Bristly, beset with bristles.Bristle-pointed,54.
Brunneous, brown.
Brush-shaped, seeaspergilliform.
Bryology, that part of botany which relates to Mosses.
Bryophyta,Bryophytes,163.
Bud, a branch in its earliest or undeveloped state,27.Bud-scales,63.
Bulb, a leaf-bud with fleshy scales, usually subterranean,46.
Bulbils, diminutive bulbs.
Bulbiferous, bearing or producing bulbs.Bulboseorbulbous, bulb-like in shape, &c.
Bulblets, small bulbs, borne above ground,46.
Bulb-scales,46.
Bullate, appearing as if blistered or bladdery (frombulla, a bubble).
Byssaceous, composed of fine flax-like threads.
Caducous, dropping off very early, compared with other parts; as the calyx in the Poppy, falling when the flower opens.Cæruleous, blue.Cærulescent, becoming bluish.Cæspitose, orCespitose, growing in turf-like patches or tufts.Calathiform, cup-shaped.Calcarate, furnished with a spur (calcar),86,87.CalceolateorCalceiform, slipper-shaped, like one petal of the Lady's Slipper.Callose, hardened; or furnished with callosities or thickened spots.Calvous, bald or naked of hairs.Calyciflorus, when petals and stamens are adnate to calyx.Calycine, belonging to the calyx.Calyculate, furnished with an outer accessory calyx (calyculus) or set of bracts looking like a calyx, as in true Pinks.Calyptra, the hood or veil of the capsule of a Moss,163.Calyptrate, having a calyptra.Calyptriform, shaped like a calyptra or candle-extinguisher.Calyx, the outer set of the floral envelopes or leaves of the flower,14,79.Cambium,Cambium-layer,140.Campanulate, bell-shaped,90.Campylotropous, orCampylotropal, curved ovules and seeds,111.Campylospermous, applied to fruits of Umbelliferæ when the seed is curved in at the edges, forming a groove down the inner face; as in Sweet Cicely.Canaliculate, channelled, or with a deep longitudinal groove.Cancellate, latticed, resembling lattice-work.Candidus, Latin for pure white.Canescent, grayish-white; hoary, usually because the surface is covered with fine white hairs.Incanousis whiter still.Canous, whitened with pubescence; seeincanous.Capillaceous,Capillary, hair-like in shape; as fine as hair or slender bristles.Capitate, having a globular apex, like the head on a pin.Capitellate, diminutive of capitate.Capitulum, a close rounded dense cluster orheadof sessile flowers,74.Capreolate, bearing tendrils (fromcapreolus, a tendril).Capsule, a dry dehiscent seed-vessel of a compound pistil,122.Capsular, relating to, or like a capsule.Capture of insects,154.Carina, a keel; the two anterior petals of a papilionaceous flower,92.Carinate, keeled, furnished with a sharp ridge or projection on the lower side.Cariopsis, orCaryopsis, the one-seeded fruit or grain of Grasses,121.Carneous, flesh-colored; pale red.Carnose, fleshy in texture.Carpel, orCarpidium, a simple pistil or a pistil-leaf,106.Carpellary, pertaining to a carpel.Carpology, that department of botany which relates to fruits.Carpophore, the stalk or support of a pistil extending between its carpels,113.Carpos, Greek for fruit.Cartilaginous, orCartilagineous, firm and tough in texture, like cartilage.Caruncle, an excrescence at the scar of some seeds,126.Carunculate, furnished with a caruncle.Caryophyllaceous, pink-like: applied to a corolla of 5 long-clawed petals.Cassideous, helmet-shaped.Cassus, empty and sterile.Catenate, orCatenulate, end to end as in a chain.Catkin, seeAment,75.Caudate, tailed, or tail-pointed.Caudex, a sort of trunk, such as that of Palms; an upright rootstock,39,44.Caudicle, the stalk of a pollen-mass, &c.Caulescent, having an obvious stem,36.Caulicle, a little stem, or rudimentary stem (of a seedling),11,127.Cauline, of or belonging to a stem,36.Caulis, Latin name of stem.Caulocarpic, equivalent to perennial.Caulome, the cauline parts of a plant.Cell(diminutive,Cellule), the cavity of an anther, ovary, &c.; one of the anatomical elements,131.Cellular Cryptogams,162.Cellular tissue,131.Cellulose,131.Cell-walls,130.Centrifugal(inflorescence), produced or expanding in succession from the centre outwards,77.Centripetal, the opposite of centrifugal,74.Cephala, Greek for head. In compounds,Monocephalous, with one head,Microcephalous, small-headed, &c.Cereal, belonging to corn, or corn-plants.Cernuous, nodding; the summit more or less inclining.Chæta, Greek for bristle.Chaff, small membranous scales or bracts on the receptacle of Compositæ; the glumes, &c., of grasses.Chaffy, furnished with chaff, or of the texture of chaff.Chalaza, that part of the ovule where all the parts grow together,110,126.Channelled, hollowed out like a gutter; same ascanaliculate.Character, a phrase expressing the essential marks of a species, genus, &c.,181.Chartaceous, of the texture of paper or parchment.Chloros, Greek for green, whenceChloranthous, green-flowered;Chlorocarpous, green-fruited, &c.Chlorophyll, leaf green,136.Chlorosis, a condition in which naturally colored parts turn green.Choripetalous, same as polypetalous.Chorisis, separation of the normally united parts, or where two or more parts take the place of one.Chromule, coloring matter in plants, especially when not green, or when liquid.Chrysos, Greek for golden yellow, whenceChrysanthous, yellow-flowered, &c.Cicatrix, the scar left by the fall of a leaf or other organ.Ciliate, beset on the margin with a fringe ofcilia, i. e. of hairs or bristles, like the eyelashes fringing the eyelids, whence the name.Cinereous, orCineraceous, ash-grayish; of the color of ashes.Circinate, rolled inwards from the top,72.Circumscissile, orCircumcissile, divided by a circular line round the sides, as the pods of Purslane, Plantain, &c.,124.Circumscription, general outline.Cirrhiferous, orCirrhose, furnished with a tendril (Latin,Cirrhus); as the Grape-vine.Cirrhosealso means resembling or coiling like tendrils, as the leaf-stalks of Virgin's-bower. More properlyCirrusandCirrose.Citreous, lemon-yellow.Clados, Greek for branch.Cladophylla,64.Class,178,183.Classification,175,183.Clathrate, latticed; same ascancellate.Clavate, club-shaped; slender below and thickened upwards.Clavellate, diminutive of clavate.Claviculate, havingClaviculæ, or little tendrils or hooks.Claw, the narrow or stalk-like base of some petals, as of Pinks,91.Cleistogamous(Cleistogamy), fertilized in closed bud,115.Cleft, cut into lobes,55.Closefertilization,115.Climbing, rising by clinging to other objects,39,151.Club shaped, seeclavate.Clustered, leaves, flowers, &c., aggregated or collected into a bunch.Clypeate, buckler-shaped.Coadunate, same asconnate, i. e. united.Coalescent, growing together.Coalescence,88.Coarctate, contracted or brought close together.Coated, having an integument, or covered in layers. Coated bulb,46.Cobwebby, same asarachnoid; bearing hairs like cobwebs or gossamer.Coccineous, scarlet-red.Coccus(pluralcocci), anciently a berry; now mostly used to denote the separable carpels or nutlets of a dry fruit.Cochleariform, spoon-shaped.Cochleate, coiled or shaped like a snail-shell.Cœlospermous, applied to those fruits of Umbelliferæ which have the seed hollowed on the inner face, by incurving of top and bottom; as in Coriander.Coherent, usually the same asconnate.Cohort, name sometimes used for groups between order and class,178.Coleorhiza, a root-sheath.Collateral, side by side.Collective fruits,118.CollumorCollar, the neck or junction of stem and root.Colored, parts of a plant which are other-colored than green.Columella, the axis to which the carpels of a compound pistil are often attached, as in Geranium (112), or which is left when a pod opens, as in Azalea.Column, the united stamens, as in Mallow, or the stamens and pistils united into one body, as in the Orchis family.Columnar, shaped like a column or pillar.Coma, a tuft of any sort (literally, a head of hair),125.Comose, tufted; bearing a tuft of hairs, as the seeds of Milkweed,126.Commissure, the line of junction of two carpels, as in the fruit of Umbelliferæ.Complanate, flattened.Compound leaf,54,57.Compound pistil,107.Compound umbel,75, &c.Complete(flower),81.Complicate, folded upon itself.Compressed, flattened on opposite sides.Conceptacle,168.Concinnous, neat.Concolor, all of one color.Conchiform, shell- or half-shell-shaped.Conduplicate, folded upon itself lengthwise,71.Cone, the fruit of the Pine family,124.Coniferous, cone-bearing.Confertus, much crowded.Conferruminate, stuck together, as the cotyledons in a horse-chestnut.Confluent, blended together; or the same ascoherent.Conformed, similar to another thing it is associated with or compared to; or closely fitted to it, as the skin to the kernel of a seed.Congested,Conglomerate, crowded together.Conglomerate, crowded into a glomerule.Conjugate, coupled; in single pairs.Conjugation,170.Connate, united or grown together from the first formation,96.Connate-perfoliate, when a pair of leaves are connate round a stem,60.Connective,Connectivum, the part of the anther connecting its two cells,101.Connivent, converging, or brought close together.Consolidation(floral),94.Consolidatedforms of vegetation,47.Contentsof cells,136.Continuous, the reverse of interrupted or articulated.Contorted, twisted together.Contorted æstivation, same asconvolute,97.Contortuplicate, twisted back upon itself.Contracted, either narrowed or shortened.Contrary, turned in opposite direction to the ordinary.Convolute, rolled up lengthwise, as the leaves of the Plum in vernation,72. In æstivation, same ascontorted,97.Cordate, heart-shaped,53.Coriaceous, resembling leather in texture.Corky, of the texture of cork.Corky layerof bark,141.Corm, a solid bulb, like that of Crocus,45.Corneous, of the consistence or appearance of horn.Corniculate, furnished with a small horn or spur.Cornute, horned; bearing a horn-like projection or appendage.Corolla, the leaves of the flower within the calyx,14,79.Corollaceous,Corolline, like or belonging to a corolla.Corona, a coronet or crown; an appendage at the top of the claw of some petals,91.Coronate, crowned; furnished with a crown.Cortex, bark.Cortical, belonging to the bark (cortex).Corticate, coated with bark or bark-like covering.Corymb, a flat or convex indeterminate flower-cluster,74.Corymbiferous, bearing corymbs.Corymbose, in corymbs, approaching the form of a corymb, or branched in that way.Costa, a rib; the midrib of a leaf, &c.Costate, ribbed.Cotyledons, the proper leaves of the embryo,11,127.Crateriform, goblet-shaped or deep saucer-shaped.Creeping(stems), growing flat on or beneath the ground and rooting,39.Cremocarp, a half-fruit, or one of the two carpels of Umbelliferæ,121.Crenate, orCrenelled, the edge scalloped into rounded teeth,55.Crenulate, minutely or slightly crenate.Crested, orCristate, bearing any elevated appendage like a crest.Cretaceous, chalky or chalk-like.Cribrose, orcribriform, pierced like a sieve with small apertures.Crinite, bearing long hairs.Crispate, curled or crispy.Croceous, saffron-color, deep reddish-yellow.Cross-breeds, the progeny of interbred varieties,176.Cross fertilization,115.Crown, seecorona.Crowned, seecoronate.Cruciate, orCruciform, cross-shaped.Cruciform Corolla,86.Crustaceous, hard and brittle in texture; crust-like.Cryptogamous Plants,Cryptogams,10,156.Cryptos, concealed, asCryptopetalous, with concealed petals, &c.Crystalsin plants,137.Cucullate, hooded, or hood-shaped, rolled up like a cornet of paper, or a hood (cucullus), as the spathe of Indian Turnip,75.Culm, a straw; the stem of Grasses and Sedges,39.Cultrate, shaped like a trowel or broad knife.Cuneate,Cuneiform, wedge-shaped,53.Cup-shaped, same as cyathiform or near it.Cupule, a little cup; the cup to the acorn of the Oak,122.Cupular, orCupulate, provided with a cupule.Cupuliferous, cupule-bearing.Curviveined, with curved ribs or veins.Curviserial, in oblique or spiral ranks.Cushion, the enlargement at the insertion or base of a petiole.Cuspidate, tipped with a sharp and stiff point orcusp,54.Cut, same as incised, or applied generally to any sharp and deep division,55.Cuticle, the skin of plants, or more strictly its external pellicle.Cyaneous, bright blue.Cyathiform, in the shape of a cup, or particularly of a wine-glass.Cycle, one complete turn of a spire, or a circle,70.Cyclical, rolled up circularly, or coiled into a complete circle.Cyclosis, circulation in closed cells,149.Cylindraceous, approaching to theCylindricalform, terete and not tapering.Cymbæform, orCymbiform, same as boat-shaped.Cyme, a cluster of centrifugal inflorescence,77.Cymose, furnished with cymes, or like a cyme.Cymule, a partial or diminutive cyme,77.
Caducous, dropping off very early, compared with other parts; as the calyx in the Poppy, falling when the flower opens.
Cæruleous, blue.Cærulescent, becoming bluish.
Cæspitose, orCespitose, growing in turf-like patches or tufts.
Calathiform, cup-shaped.
Calcarate, furnished with a spur (calcar),86,87.
CalceolateorCalceiform, slipper-shaped, like one petal of the Lady's Slipper.
Callose, hardened; or furnished with callosities or thickened spots.
Calvous, bald or naked of hairs.
Calyciflorus, when petals and stamens are adnate to calyx.
Calycine, belonging to the calyx.
Calyculate, furnished with an outer accessory calyx (calyculus) or set of bracts looking like a calyx, as in true Pinks.
Calyptra, the hood or veil of the capsule of a Moss,163.
Calyptrate, having a calyptra.
Calyptriform, shaped like a calyptra or candle-extinguisher.
Calyx, the outer set of the floral envelopes or leaves of the flower,14,79.
Cambium,Cambium-layer,140.
Campanulate, bell-shaped,90.
Campylotropous, orCampylotropal, curved ovules and seeds,111.Campylospermous, applied to fruits of Umbelliferæ when the seed is curved in at the edges, forming a groove down the inner face; as in Sweet Cicely.
Canaliculate, channelled, or with a deep longitudinal groove.
Cancellate, latticed, resembling lattice-work.
Candidus, Latin for pure white.
Canescent, grayish-white; hoary, usually because the surface is covered with fine white hairs.Incanousis whiter still.
Canous, whitened with pubescence; seeincanous.
Capillaceous,Capillary, hair-like in shape; as fine as hair or slender bristles.
Capitate, having a globular apex, like the head on a pin.
Capitellate, diminutive of capitate.
Capitulum, a close rounded dense cluster orheadof sessile flowers,74.
Capreolate, bearing tendrils (fromcapreolus, a tendril).
Capsule, a dry dehiscent seed-vessel of a compound pistil,122.
Capsular, relating to, or like a capsule.
Capture of insects,154.
Carina, a keel; the two anterior petals of a papilionaceous flower,92.
Carinate, keeled, furnished with a sharp ridge or projection on the lower side.
Cariopsis, orCaryopsis, the one-seeded fruit or grain of Grasses,121.
Carneous, flesh-colored; pale red.Carnose, fleshy in texture.
Carpel, orCarpidium, a simple pistil or a pistil-leaf,106.
Carpellary, pertaining to a carpel.
Carpology, that department of botany which relates to fruits.
Carpophore, the stalk or support of a pistil extending between its carpels,113.
Carpos, Greek for fruit.
Cartilaginous, orCartilagineous, firm and tough in texture, like cartilage.
Caruncle, an excrescence at the scar of some seeds,126.
Carunculate, furnished with a caruncle.
Caryophyllaceous, pink-like: applied to a corolla of 5 long-clawed petals.
Cassideous, helmet-shaped.
Cassus, empty and sterile.
Catenate, orCatenulate, end to end as in a chain.
Catkin, seeAment,75.
Caudate, tailed, or tail-pointed.
Caudex, a sort of trunk, such as that of Palms; an upright rootstock,39,44.
Caudicle, the stalk of a pollen-mass, &c.
Caulescent, having an obvious stem,36.
Caulicle, a little stem, or rudimentary stem (of a seedling),11,127.
Cauline, of or belonging to a stem,36.Caulis, Latin name of stem.
Caulocarpic, equivalent to perennial.
Caulome, the cauline parts of a plant.
Cell(diminutive,Cellule), the cavity of an anther, ovary, &c.; one of the anatomical elements,131.
Cellular Cryptogams,162.
Cellular tissue,131.
Cellulose,131.
Cell-walls,130.
Centrifugal(inflorescence), produced or expanding in succession from the centre outwards,77.
Centripetal, the opposite of centrifugal,74.
Cephala, Greek for head. In compounds,Monocephalous, with one head,Microcephalous, small-headed, &c.
Cereal, belonging to corn, or corn-plants.
Cernuous, nodding; the summit more or less inclining.
Chæta, Greek for bristle.
Chaff, small membranous scales or bracts on the receptacle of Compositæ; the glumes, &c., of grasses.
Chaffy, furnished with chaff, or of the texture of chaff.
Chalaza, that part of the ovule where all the parts grow together,110,126.
Channelled, hollowed out like a gutter; same ascanaliculate.
Character, a phrase expressing the essential marks of a species, genus, &c.,181.
Chartaceous, of the texture of paper or parchment.
Chloros, Greek for green, whenceChloranthous, green-flowered;Chlorocarpous, green-fruited, &c.
Chlorophyll, leaf green,136.
Chlorosis, a condition in which naturally colored parts turn green.
Choripetalous, same as polypetalous.
Chorisis, separation of the normally united parts, or where two or more parts take the place of one.
Chromule, coloring matter in plants, especially when not green, or when liquid.
Chrysos, Greek for golden yellow, whenceChrysanthous, yellow-flowered, &c.
Cicatrix, the scar left by the fall of a leaf or other organ.
Ciliate, beset on the margin with a fringe ofcilia, i. e. of hairs or bristles, like the eyelashes fringing the eyelids, whence the name.
Cinereous, orCineraceous, ash-grayish; of the color of ashes.
Circinate, rolled inwards from the top,72.
Circumscissile, orCircumcissile, divided by a circular line round the sides, as the pods of Purslane, Plantain, &c.,124.
Circumscription, general outline.
Cirrhiferous, orCirrhose, furnished with a tendril (Latin,Cirrhus); as the Grape-vine.Cirrhosealso means resembling or coiling like tendrils, as the leaf-stalks of Virgin's-bower. More properlyCirrusandCirrose.
Citreous, lemon-yellow.
Clados, Greek for branch.Cladophylla,64.
Class,178,183.
Classification,175,183.
Clathrate, latticed; same ascancellate.
Clavate, club-shaped; slender below and thickened upwards.
Clavellate, diminutive of clavate.
Claviculate, havingClaviculæ, or little tendrils or hooks.
Claw, the narrow or stalk-like base of some petals, as of Pinks,91.
Cleistogamous(Cleistogamy), fertilized in closed bud,115.
Cleft, cut into lobes,55.
Closefertilization,115.
Climbing, rising by clinging to other objects,39,151.
Club shaped, seeclavate.
Clustered, leaves, flowers, &c., aggregated or collected into a bunch.
Clypeate, buckler-shaped.
Coadunate, same asconnate, i. e. united.
Coalescent, growing together.Coalescence,88.
Coarctate, contracted or brought close together.
Coated, having an integument, or covered in layers. Coated bulb,46.
Cobwebby, same asarachnoid; bearing hairs like cobwebs or gossamer.
Coccineous, scarlet-red.
Coccus(pluralcocci), anciently a berry; now mostly used to denote the separable carpels or nutlets of a dry fruit.
Cochleariform, spoon-shaped.
Cochleate, coiled or shaped like a snail-shell.
Cœlospermous, applied to those fruits of Umbelliferæ which have the seed hollowed on the inner face, by incurving of top and bottom; as in Coriander.
Coherent, usually the same asconnate.
Cohort, name sometimes used for groups between order and class,178.
Coleorhiza, a root-sheath.
Collateral, side by side.
Collective fruits,118.
CollumorCollar, the neck or junction of stem and root.
Colored, parts of a plant which are other-colored than green.
Columella, the axis to which the carpels of a compound pistil are often attached, as in Geranium (112), or which is left when a pod opens, as in Azalea.
Column, the united stamens, as in Mallow, or the stamens and pistils united into one body, as in the Orchis family.
Columnar, shaped like a column or pillar.
Coma, a tuft of any sort (literally, a head of hair),125.
Comose, tufted; bearing a tuft of hairs, as the seeds of Milkweed,126.
Commissure, the line of junction of two carpels, as in the fruit of Umbelliferæ.
Complanate, flattened.
Compound leaf,54,57.Compound pistil,107.Compound umbel,75, &c.
Complete(flower),81.
Complicate, folded upon itself.
Compressed, flattened on opposite sides.
Conceptacle,168.
Concinnous, neat.
Concolor, all of one color.
Conchiform, shell- or half-shell-shaped.
Conduplicate, folded upon itself lengthwise,71.
Cone, the fruit of the Pine family,124.Coniferous, cone-bearing.
Confertus, much crowded.
Conferruminate, stuck together, as the cotyledons in a horse-chestnut.
Confluent, blended together; or the same ascoherent.
Conformed, similar to another thing it is associated with or compared to; or closely fitted to it, as the skin to the kernel of a seed.
Congested,Conglomerate, crowded together.
Conglomerate, crowded into a glomerule.
Conjugate, coupled; in single pairs.Conjugation,170.
Connate, united or grown together from the first formation,96.
Connate-perfoliate, when a pair of leaves are connate round a stem,60.
Connective,Connectivum, the part of the anther connecting its two cells,101.
Connivent, converging, or brought close together.
Consolidation(floral),94.
Consolidatedforms of vegetation,47.
Contentsof cells,136.
Continuous, the reverse of interrupted or articulated.
Contorted, twisted together.Contorted æstivation, same asconvolute,97.
Contortuplicate, twisted back upon itself.
Contracted, either narrowed or shortened.
Contrary, turned in opposite direction to the ordinary.
Convolute, rolled up lengthwise, as the leaves of the Plum in vernation,72. In æstivation, same ascontorted,97.
Cordate, heart-shaped,53.
Coriaceous, resembling leather in texture.
Corky, of the texture of cork.Corky layerof bark,141.
Corm, a solid bulb, like that of Crocus,45.
Corneous, of the consistence or appearance of horn.
Corniculate, furnished with a small horn or spur.
Cornute, horned; bearing a horn-like projection or appendage.
Corolla, the leaves of the flower within the calyx,14,79.
Corollaceous,Corolline, like or belonging to a corolla.
Corona, a coronet or crown; an appendage at the top of the claw of some petals,91.
Coronate, crowned; furnished with a crown.
Cortex, bark.Cortical, belonging to the bark (cortex).
Corticate, coated with bark or bark-like covering.
Corymb, a flat or convex indeterminate flower-cluster,74.
Corymbiferous, bearing corymbs.
Corymbose, in corymbs, approaching the form of a corymb, or branched in that way.
Costa, a rib; the midrib of a leaf, &c.Costate, ribbed.
Cotyledons, the proper leaves of the embryo,11,127.
Crateriform, goblet-shaped or deep saucer-shaped.
Creeping(stems), growing flat on or beneath the ground and rooting,39.
Cremocarp, a half-fruit, or one of the two carpels of Umbelliferæ,121.
Crenate, orCrenelled, the edge scalloped into rounded teeth,55.
Crenulate, minutely or slightly crenate.
Crested, orCristate, bearing any elevated appendage like a crest.
Cretaceous, chalky or chalk-like.
Cribrose, orcribriform, pierced like a sieve with small apertures.
Crinite, bearing long hairs.
Crispate, curled or crispy.
Croceous, saffron-color, deep reddish-yellow.
Cross-breeds, the progeny of interbred varieties,176.
Cross fertilization,115.
Crown, seecorona.Crowned, seecoronate.
Cruciate, orCruciform, cross-shaped.Cruciform Corolla,86.
Crustaceous, hard and brittle in texture; crust-like.
Cryptogamous Plants,Cryptogams,10,156.
Cryptos, concealed, asCryptopetalous, with concealed petals, &c.
Crystalsin plants,137.
Cucullate, hooded, or hood-shaped, rolled up like a cornet of paper, or a hood (cucullus), as the spathe of Indian Turnip,75.
Culm, a straw; the stem of Grasses and Sedges,39.
Cultrate, shaped like a trowel or broad knife.
Cuneate,Cuneiform, wedge-shaped,53.
Cup-shaped, same as cyathiform or near it.
Cupule, a little cup; the cup to the acorn of the Oak,122.
Cupular, orCupulate, provided with a cupule.
Cupuliferous, cupule-bearing.
Curviveined, with curved ribs or veins.
Curviserial, in oblique or spiral ranks.
Cushion, the enlargement at the insertion or base of a petiole.
Cuspidate, tipped with a sharp and stiff point orcusp,54.
Cut, same as incised, or applied generally to any sharp and deep division,55.
Cuticle, the skin of plants, or more strictly its external pellicle.
Cyaneous, bright blue.
Cyathiform, in the shape of a cup, or particularly of a wine-glass.
Cycle, one complete turn of a spire, or a circle,70.
Cyclical, rolled up circularly, or coiled into a complete circle.
Cyclosis, circulation in closed cells,149.
Cylindraceous, approaching to theCylindricalform, terete and not tapering.
Cymbæform, orCymbiform, same as boat-shaped.
Cyme, a cluster of centrifugal inflorescence,77.
Cymose, furnished with cymes, or like a cyme.
Cymule, a partial or diminutive cyme,77.