122 OF THE DIFFERENT 



' branches from the summits of the for- 

 mer ones*, as in the Scotch Fir, Finifs 

 Sf/lveatris, Lambert's Pinus, f. 1. and Ly- 

 copodium annoiinum, EiigL Bof. t, 1727- 

 This is obsolete, and seldom used. 



Deferminatl' ramosus, f, 23, abruptly 

 branched, when each branchy after termi- 

 nating in flowers, produces a number of 

 fresh shoots in a circular order from just 

 below the origin of those flowers. This 

 term occurs frequently in the later publi- 

 cations of Linnieus, particularly the 

 second Mantissa, but I know not that he 

 has any w^here explained its meaning. It 

 is exemplified in Azalea nudiflora. Curt, 

 Mag. t, ISO," Erica Tetrali.v, Engl 

 Bot. t. 1014, many Cape Heaths, and 

 other shrubs of the same Natural Order, 



Ariiculatus, jointed, as in Samphire, Sa- 

 licornia anniia^ Engl. Bot. ^.415, and 

 more remarkably in the Indian Figs, _ 

 Cactns Tuna, &c. 



In shape the Stem is 



Teres, f. 32, round, as in Ti^ollius europccus, 



* Limi. Phil. Bot. sect, 82. 28. 



