186 TERMINATIONS OF LEAVES. 



Bot. t. 13, 14, Bunias Cakile. Engl. Bot. f. 231, Le^ 

 pidium dichjmum^ t. 24i^^ petraiim, t. Ill, and Myri- 

 ophyllum verticillaturriy t. 218. 



Blpinnatijidum, f. 67, doubly pinnatifid, as Papaver 

 Argemone, t. 643, and Eriocalia major ^ Exot. Bot t. 

 78. (69) 



Pect'inatum.f. 68, pectinate, is a pinnatifid leaf, whose 

 segments are remarkably narrow and parallel, like the 

 teeth of a comb, as the lower leaves of Mi/riophijllum 

 verticillatum, and those of Hottonia palustris, Engl. 

 Bot. t. 364. 



Ineequale^ f. 69, unequal, sometimes called oblique, 

 when the two halves of the leaf are unequal in dimen- 

 sions, and their bases not parallel, as in Eucalyptus 

 resinifera, Exot. Bot. t. 84, and most of that genus, 

 as well as of Begonia. 



5. The Terminations of leaves are various. 



Folium trujicatum,/. 49, an abrupt leaf, has the extrem- 

 ity cut off, as it were, by a transverse line, as Lirio- 

 dendrum tulipifera^ Curt. Mag. t. 275. 



Prcemorsum, f. 70, jagged-pointed, very blunt, with 

 various irregular notches, as in Dr. Swartz's genus, 



Aerides, comprehended under the Epidendrum of Lin- 

 naeus. See E. tessellatum, Roxb. PI. of Coromandel^ 

 t. 42, and pr^morsum, ?.43. 



Betusum,/. 71, retuse, ending in a broad shallow notch, 

 as Rumex digynus, Engl. Bot. t. 910. 



(69) Leaves singly and doubly pinnatifid, are found in the 

 weeds called Roman Wormwood or Hogweed, Ambrosia, clatiovy 

 Jianiculata, 8cc. 



