TE Mr. S ALISBUR Y $ Remarks on 
the young leaves sd Filices, are rolled up: it is then fynonymous 
with either involutus or revolutus, 
Colum. A common receptacle o on which the feeds are inferted in . 
fome pericarpiums : it is probably analogous to the placenta i in 
animals, and very confpicuous in the natural order of Didynamia | 
Ang io/perma. 
Cotyliformis. This term kina from acetabuli liformis i in having ftraight- 
E fides not incurved. T. ab. 5. fits 7 
ende E 
Dirt. Gans tat iis calathi iformis, but not fe much bel- 
lying out, and rather approaching to infundi buli ifarmis.. Fig. 8 
Cyathiformis. Like a ele : more or lefs obconical and con- 
cave. Fig. Q. 
CM Ln found this, and all the other terms of — I have given 
- figures, very ufeful in citinguithing fome of the fpecies of Nar. 
E and Erica. 
"MAN Bent down. - 
This term is rendered quite Tanem by deflexus, recurvus, 
- and reclinatus, which. expreís the mode of flexion more precifely. 
Difeus, - "The furface of any part excluding the borders. see 
-So I would diftinguifh it from Pagina, 
c0 ten. me 
| Elliptica | pars longior quam lata eft, marginibus medio lineis rau pa- 
rallelis, extremitatibus plus minus femicircularibus, siete 
Linné often confounds this term with oval. 
__ Fafüigiatus, according to the two Linnean definitions, is- ges 
with either corymbofus OI conicus. | I 
d now only ufe it for any part that is towering or lofty. 
d e 
