Bib 



Boot 



formation of plates of cellular tissue 

 within the liber. 



Bib, a primary vein, especially the 

 central longitudinal or midrib ; 

 ribbed, furnished with prominent 

 ribs. 



Bicino'lein, the glyceride of Ricinoleic 

 Acid, present in the seeds of 

 Ricinus. 



Bic'tus (Lat., the opened mouth), the 

 mouth or gorge of a bilabiate 

 corolla, 



Bidge, an elevated line ou the fruit 

 of IFmbelliferae ; either primary or 

 secondary. 



rig'ens (Lat.), stiff, rigid; riges'cent, 

 rigcs'ceiis, having a stiff consistence. 



right-hand'ed = dextuouse ; cf. Ap- 

 pendix C. 



rig'id, rig'idus (Lat. ), stiti", inflexible ; 

 rigid'ulous, somewhat rigid. 



Bi'ma (Lat., a cleft), (1) a chink or 

 cleft ; (2) the ostiole of certain 

 Fungi (Lindley) ; rima'tus, X (Mod. 

 (Lat.), rimose ; ri'miform {forma, 

 shape), shaped like a cleft ; ri'mose, 

 rivio us, ri'mous, with chinks or 

 cracks, as old bark; rimulo'sus 

 J (Mod. Lat.), a diminutive of 



RIMOSE. 



Bims of Sanio, cf. Sanio's Kim.s. 



Bind, (1) the outer bark of a tree, all 

 the tissue outside the cambium ; (2) 

 sometimes restricted to the tissues 

 exterior to the active phloem; (3) 

 the outer layer or cortex of Fungi ; 

 (4) in Lichens the Stratum corlica'le, 

 also styled Bind-lay'er. 



Bing, see Annultts for the various 

 senses in which it is used ; ~ Bark, 

 the outer bark when disengaged in 

 strips or layers (Hartig) ; -^ Fascina- 

 tion, the apical division of a stem 

 or tlower by the formation of a 

 central, circular, inversely-orientated 

 set of tissues corresponding to the 

 external normal set (Worsdell) ; ~ 

 Pores, vessels in wood when arranged 

 in the annual rings as seen in 

 transverse section ; '^ Scale, dis- 

 ease caused by Tntmetes Fini, Fr. ; 

 ~ Type, an appearance in nuclear 

 division ; ~ Wood, the innormost 



part of the wood (Solereder) ; 

 Bing'worm, a disease of the skin 

 due to Trichophyton tonsurans, 

 Malmsten. 

 rin'gent, rin'<jen» (Lat., gaping), 

 wide open, gaping, as the mouth of 

 a labiate corolla ; ringeutifl j'rus 

 {floH, a flower), the receptacle of 

 such Compositae as bear ringent 

 florets (J. S. Henslow); ringenti'- 

 form'is [forma, shape), apparently 

 gaping. 

 ripa'rian, ripa'rious, ripa'rius (Lat., 

 frequenting river-banks), growing 

 by rivers or streams. 

 BipO; mature, the completion of an 

 organ or organism for its allotted 

 function; ri'pening, maturing. 

 rivalis (Lat., pertaining to a brook), 



growing by a brook-side. 

 ri'vose, rivo'sus [Lai. well-watered), 



having sinuate channels (Crozier). 

 rivularia'ceous, resembling the genus 

 Rivularia ; rivula'rioid [fl^os, re- 

 semblance), means the same. 

 rivula'ris [rivulus, a rill), growing by 

 watercourses ; riv'ulose, (1) having 

 small sinuate channels (Crozier) ; 

 (2) marked with lines like a rivulet 

 (Stevenson). 

 rizo'mic, an error for khizomatic. 

 robori'nus (Mod. Lat., from rohur, 

 roboris, oak), the grey colour of last 

 year's oak twigs (Hayne). 

 Bod-fructifica'tion, special simple 

 gonidiophores in Basidioniycetes ; 

 Bod'lets, straight rigid bacteria. 

 Boff'ia = Baffia. 



Bogue, a gardener's name for a jilant 

 which does not come true from 

 seed ; a variation from the type. 

 Boot, tlie descending axis, growing in 

 the opposite direction from the 

 stem, enodose, mostly developing 

 underground, and absorbing mois- 

 ture from the soil ; ~ Bacil'lus, a 

 bacillus which has its station on 

 roots, as the nitrifying bacteria ; '~' 

 Cap, large cells which form a cap- 

 like covering for the smaller cells 

 I in rear (growing point) ; ^ Cli'mbera, 

 plants which clamber up tree trunks 

 I by their root-like holdfasts ; ^ 



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