SURFACE OF LEAVES. 1(J5 



p. 124. • To these may be added the fol- 

 lowing, chiefly appropriated to leaves. 

 Punctafutn, dotted; either superficially as 

 in Tihododendnim punctatum^ Andr. 

 Rtpos. t. 36, and Melaleuca Unari- 

 folia, Exot. Bot. t. oG ; or through the 

 substance, as in Hypericum perforatum^ 

 EngL Bot. t. 295, and the whole na- 

 tural order to which the Orange and 

 Lemon belong:. 

 Kugosu??i, rugged, when the veins are 

 tighter than the surface between them, 

 causino; the latter to swell into little 

 inequalities, as in various species of 

 Sage, Salvia. See Flora Grceca ; also 

 Teucrium Scorodouia^ Engl. Bot. 1. 1543. 

 Bullafum, blistery, is only a greater de- 

 gree of the last, as in the Garden Cab- 

 bage, Brassica oleracea, 

 Plicatufn^f. 85, plaited, when the disk of 

 the leaf, especially towards the margin, is 

 acutely folded up and down, as in Mal- 

 lows, nnd Alchemilla vulgaris, Engl. Bot. 

 f- 597» where, however, the character 

 is but obscurely expressed. 

 Undulatu?n,f.^6, undulated, when the disk 

 near the margin is waved obtusely up and 



