20 .ON THE STRUCTUEAL ANATOMY OF FUNGI. 



Farinose, covered -with white floury powder. 



Fibrillose, covered with fine loose fibres or threads. 



Fimbriate, bordered with a fringe. 



Flabelliform, shaped like an open fan. 



Flaccid, relaxed, wilted. 



Fleshy, substantial, but soft like flesh. 



Floccose, Flocculose, covered with soft woolly haira which 

 depend in tufts. 



Gibbous, having irregular convexities or swellings. 



Glabrous, surface devoid of hair, down, scales, warts, or other 

 appendages. 



Globose, round like a ball, with or without a stem attached. 



Glutinous, sui'faco sticky to the touch. 



Granular, covered with minute grains. 



Hemispherical, the top equally rounded, like half a ball. 



Horizontal, level, plane. 



Hygrophanous, translucent when wet, opaque when dry. 



Imbricate, aj)plied to Pilei overlapping one another, or to scales 

 on the surface similarly. 



Immarginate, Avithout any definite edge. 



Irregular, various individuals dissimilar in outline. 



Infundibuliform, funnel-sliaped, the centre sunk below the 

 elevated margins. 



Inverted, the common form reversed. 



Laciniate, fringed with cracks or fissures in the substance. 



Lobed, Lobulate, divided as it were into small rounded pro- 

 minences. 



Moist, surface damp to the touch. 



Nodulose, covered with pimples or knots. 



Obtuse, rounded, with blunt, thick, convex margin. 



Opaque, tinted with a dead colour, not polished or clear. 



Orbicular, rounded like a ball, circular. 



Ovate, oblong, egg-shaped, broadest at the lower side. 



Ovoid, egg-shaped. 



Pallid, of an indistinct, watery, or dirty white colour. 



Papillate, covered with minute soft tubercles, like a tongue. 



Plane, quite flat. 



Polished, surface smooth and shiny, 



Pruinose, surface covered with a whitish bloom, like grapes, or 

 as if frosted. 



Pulverulent, surface dusty. 



