Calyciflorae 



eambiogenetic 



adnate to the calyx; adj., calyci- 

 flor'al, calyciflor'ous ; calyc'iform 



{Jorvia, shape), cup-shaped, applied 

 to an indusinm ; Cal'ycin, a bitter, 

 yellow, crystallizable substance 

 from Caliciiim chrysocephalum,kch.. , 

 and other Lichens; calycina'lis 

 (Lat.), carycine, calyci'nus, (1) 

 belonging to the calyx ; (2) of the 

 nature of a calyx ; (3) denoting a 

 calyx of unusual size ; calycinia'nus 

 X, calycina'ris % polyphylly of the 

 calyx ; calycina'rius, formed from 

 the calyx ; Cal'ycle, Calyc'uhis, the 

 epicalyx, or involucre hinmlating 

 an additional calyx, a whorl of 

 bracts outside the true calyx ; cal'y- 

 cled, provided with a ring of bracts 

 like an additional calyx ; cal'y- 

 coid, calycoid'eus (elSoy, resem- 

 blance), resembling a calyx ; Caly- 

 coste'mon ((tt^/xw*', a tilaraent), a 

 stamen seated on the calyx ; 

 calyc'ulate, calycula'lns, bearing 

 bracts which imitate an external 

 calyx ; Calyphy'omy {(pvo/xai, I 

 spring from), adhesion of the sepals 

 to the petals, 

 Calyp'tra {Ka\vwTpa, a veil) or Calyp'- 

 ter, (1) the hood or cap of a Moss in 

 fruit when it crowns the capsule, 

 formed from the archegonial wall ; 

 (2) applied to any cap-like cover- 

 ing of a flower or fruit, as the 

 extinguisher -shaped calyx of 

 Eschscholttia, or the lid which 

 falls ott' on expansion of some 

 Myrtaceae, as Eucalyptus ; (3) Go- 

 mont's term for a thick memlirane 

 shutting off the apical cell of a 

 trichome in Oscillarieae ; (4) a term 

 proposed by Van Tieghem and 

 Douliot for that portion of the root- 

 cap in lateral roots which belongs 

 strictly to the root-system ; (5) 

 Tournefort's word for Caruncle ; ~ 

 thalamog'ena (-|- Thalamus, yevos, 

 race, descent), a structure of the 

 capsule and stalk in some Hepaticae 

 acting as covering for the young 

 sporogonium ; calyp'trate, calyptra'- 

 tus, bearing a calyptra ; calyp'tri- 

 form, caiyptri/orm'is {forma. 



shape), shaj>cd like an extinguisher ; 

 calyptrimorph'ous {fj.op<f>h, shape), 

 a synonym of the last ; Calyp'trogen 

 {yfvos, offspring), (1) the layer of 

 cells from which the root-cap takes 

 its origin, (2) the layer of tissue 

 covering the young embryo, as in 

 Ferns ; calyptrogen'ic, producing a 

 cap or calyptra. 

 Ca'lyx (/ca\u|, a cup), the outer- 

 most of the floral envelopes ; ^ ad- 

 he'rens, when not separable from 

 the ovary ; '~ calycula'tus, when 

 surrounded by a ring of bracts ; 

 r^ commu'nis, the involucre of 

 Composites ; ~ infe'rior, — li'ber, 

 when free from the ovary ; -^ supe'- 

 rior, when adherent to the ovary ; 

 -- Tube, (1) a tubular form of the 

 calyx, due to the union of the sepals ; 



(2) J the receptacle of certain Fungi ; 



(3) the "perianth" of Hepaticae, 

 that is, the Colesula (Hooker and 

 Taylor). 



Cam'ara {Kaixdpa, a vault), occasion- 

 ally used for the cells of a fmit ; 

 Camer'ula, a diminutive of the fore- 

 going ; cama'rius, resembling a 

 simple carpel, as the berry-like 

 fruit of Actaea. 



oamb'ial {cambio, I change), relating 

 to Cambium ; camb'iform (forma, 

 shape), resembling cambium ; 

 Camb'ium (Mediaeval Lat., = ex- 

 change), a layer of nascent tissue 

 between the wood and bast, adding 

 elements to both ; formerly con- 

 sidered as a mere viscous mass ; 

 ~ Fi'bres, the immediate deriva- 

 tives of the cambium ; |)artly 

 formed woody fibres (Sanio) ; -^ 

 Lay'er, the formative tissue during 

 active growth ; --' Ring, the com- 

 plete system of the cambimn, separ- 

 ating the wood from the bast in 

 the shoot ; — fascic'ular --' , that 

 which belongs to the vascular 

 bundles ; interfascic'ular '- , that 

 which is formed between the vas- 

 cular bundles, and the primary 

 medullary rays ; cambiogeiftt'ic (-f 

 Cambium, yevos, offspring), giving 

 rise to cambium (De Bary). 



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