116 BOTANICON SINICUM. 
E., 260, family $l, with bad figure, a copy of S., IX, 14. 
Pr.,172. Sm.,171,205. Fap., 1302, Liguidambar Maximowiczti, 
‘Miq. 7 
C., 312, 1481, Acer trifidum, Hk. & Arn. Fap., 36, = F4 WA 
E., 260, has also the Indian name Sardjarasa among its — 
synonyms. — - 
252.— HA Va mu (dwelling on trees) ; be Wan tung. 
Kuo P‘o:—The ZF 2B ki sheng shu (plant which dwells 
on trees), also called $§ niao. | 
LI’. infra, 449, Mistletoe, J cet 
263.— 3 hj Wu ku; It BF Ff its fruit is called ¢. ‘ 
Kvo P‘o:— Wu ku is the same as hay ku yd. Lt grows 
in the mountains, leaves round and thick. The people strip 
off the bark and steep it ; it is of an acrid taste and fragrant. 
This is called $i #§ wu 7. be 
Hine Pixe :—The Pen ts‘ao has the names wu i and wu ku. 
P. XXXVb, 33, He FE wut. It is supposed there that 
the names in the Rh ya, 57 and 268, refer to the same plant, 
_ but 57 is an herbaceous plant (Blitum) and 263 a tree. The 
Shuo wen states that the keng tree is the same as the |) BHM 
shan fen yit (mountain elm, see 304), it has thorns, its fruit 
is called wu i. Lt Sai-cnen writes Hf, but that is a different 
- tree (see 248, 514). He states also that of the wu i there are 
- two kinds ; one is large, the other smaller. The latter is the 
‘Same as fi IE yi kia (seed-vessels of the elm tree). 
£, 269, family ti, figure probably of an Udmus. 
fe figure to ce IX, 6, is bad, but may be meant for an Uinn. 
T$54. 
Fap., 2236, Ulmus campestris, Sm., ii. 
- -Jap., 2258, Ulnus parvifolia, Jacq., #8 Ht 
= RL; Be FR its frnit is called iu. 
vo Po :— tk St AL. This phrase, nnintelligible { 
- me, refers perhaps to the subulate scales of the cupule of t 
Saag likened toa hedgehog. 
