fviaeiinoial 



raohemorpliui 



pftrtially imbricated of five parts, 

 two being exterior, two interior, and 

 tlie fifth having one margin ex- 

 terior, the other interior, as in the 

 calyx of the rose ; Qnin'canx (Lat., 

 the fraction ^^i), (1) an arrange- 

 ment like the five on dice, four at 

 the comers, and one in the centre ; 



(2) in five ranks, quinquefarious ; 



(3) "the disposition of objects so 

 that the intervening spaces are all 

 hexagons " (Crozier). 



Qoiii'ia, Qoinin", or Qoinine', an alka- 

 loid occurring in the bark of species 

 of Cinchona, liemija, etc. 



(lainlcine and Quin'idine, alkaloids 

 firom Oinckona bark. 



Qninin^ see Quinia. 



qaiBqaan'gnlar, qw'nquangular'is 



{quinauangulus, five-cornered), five- 

 angled ; quinqueeap'sular (-f- Oap- 

 sula), with five capsules ; qnin- 

 queeos'tate {cosiatus, ribbed), having 

 fire ribs; qoinqneden'tate (dentatus, 

 toothed), with five teeth ; qoinqae- 

 far'iona, -riM5 (/ariam, suffix=rank), 

 in five ranks ; quia'quefid {fid, the 

 root of findo, I cleave), five-cleft ; 

 quinqaefoliate, quinquefulia'tus 

 {quinqiufolius, five-leaved), with five 

 leaves ; quinqaefo'liolate, qicinque- 

 foliola'tus, with . five leaflets ; quin- 

 qiic(ju'%ate {jugum, a yoke), in-fiVe 

 pairs, as of leaflets ; qninquelo'bate, 

 quinqiieloba'tus {lolrds, a lobe), five- 

 iobed ; quinqaeloo'nlar, quinque- 

 locular'is {loculus, a little space), 

 five celled ; qainqnenerVed, quin- 

 quener'vis, -viics {nervtifi, a nerve), 

 the midrib dividing into five, that 

 iB, the main rib, and a pair on each 

 side ; qoinqnepar'tite, quinquepar- 

 ti'tua {partUus, divided), deeply 

 divided into five parts ; Qninqnere - 

 muB {-{- Eremus), a five-celled gyno- 

 basic ifruit, as Gomphia ; qninque- 

 ▼al'vate, qnin^qnevalve, quinqiie- 

 val'vis {valva, a door-leat"), five- 

 ▼alved; qninqnevein'ed, "the same 

 as quinquenerved " (Crozier). 

 (Join'tine, Quinti'na{quintus, the fifth), 

 a supposed integument of an ovule, 

 the nfth froim the outside, "in 



reality the skin of the " nucellus 

 (Lindley) ; Quin'tospore (<nrop&, a 

 fleed), C. MacMillan's term for a 

 spore which has attained sexual 

 potentiality, &a in vascular Crypto- 

 gams and Phanerogams. 

 qain'tuple, qain'tnpled {quiniuplex, 

 five-fold), multiplied by five ; '^ 

 -nerved, quinquenerved ; ~ ribbed, 

 quinquecostate ; when of five ribs 

 the four lateral arise from about the 

 base of the mid-rib ; quintupli- 

 ner'ved, qaintnplivein'ed, quinque- 

 nerved, five-veined. 



EaVdoid {^afiSos, a ro 1) = Rhabdoid. 



Race, (1) a variety of such fixity as to 

 be reproduced from seed ; (2) used 

 also in a loose sense for related 

 individuals without regard to rank ; 

 Adap'tive ~ or Biolog'ical ~', a 

 Race distinguished by its physiologi- 

 cal characters, not by its morphology; 

 Between'- --' , consisting of ( 1 ) Half- 

 '-' , showing a small number of plants 

 with racial characters, the majority 

 being of the original specific type ; 

 (2) Mid- '~, showing racial charac- 

 ters in about half the seedlings 

 produced, or various combinations ; 

 Habituation ^ , or Physiolog'ical '~ , 

 those not differing morphologically, 

 but showing great difference in vitel 

 function, as in parasitism. 



Bacema'tion {racemaf4o, the gleaning 

 of a vineyard), a cluster, as of 

 grapes; Baceme', Race'mus (Lat., 

 a bunch of grapes), an indetermi- 

 nate or centripetal inflorescence with 

 lengthened axis, and equally pedi- 

 cellate flowers ; racemif' erous {fero, 

 I bear), bearing racemes; racemi- 

 flor'us (/o«, fl/yris, a flower), flowers 

 borne in a raceme ; race'miform, 

 racemiform'is {fornia, shape), in the 

 form of a raceme ; rac'emose, race- 

 mo'sus, rac'emous, having racemes, 

 or raceme-like ; race'muloBe, race- 

 mulo'sus, a diminutive of the laat, 

 somewhat racemose ; Bac'emnlA, » 

 small raceme. 



rachenlDr'phuB (Lindley) -■ rachi- 



MORPHUS. 



ai8 



