1»1ARGINS OF LEAVES. l(Jl 



mites, f. 401, and Scirpus ?7iaritimi(s, 

 t. 543. 



ObtuHum cum acumine, f. 74, blunt with 

 a small point, as Statice Limoiiiiimy 

 t. 102. 



Mucronatum or Cuspiclatmn,/. 75, sharp- 

 pointed, tipped with a rigid spine, as in 

 the Thistles, t. 107, t. 386, &c., Rm- 

 cus aculeatus, t. 560, and Melaleuca 

 nodosa, E.iot. Bot. i. 35. 



Cirrosum, f. 76, cirrose, tipped with a ten- 

 dril, as in Gloriosa superha, Aiidr. 

 Repos. t. 129. 



6. The different Margins of Leaves are cha- 

 racterized as follows. 

 Folium integerrimum, f. 39, an entire leaf, 

 as in the Orchis and Lily tribe, as well as 

 Roll/gala vulga7-is, Engl. Bot. t. 76, 

 Daphne Laureola, t. 119? &c. 



This term is opposed to all kinds of 

 teeth, notches, or incisions. It regards 

 solely the margin of a leaf; whereas in- 

 tegrum^ p. 152, respects its whole shape, 

 and has nothing to do with the margin. 

 English writers who translate the one 

 entire, and the other very entire, are 

 therefore incorrect. 



M 



