glandular 



Glomerule 



lar, possessing glands ; -^ Disk, ^ 

 Glandula; ^ Hair, an epidermal 

 appendage, the end of which is 

 usually enlarged, and contains a 

 special secretion ; ~ Wood'y Tis'sae, 

 coniferous pitted tissue ; Glandulu'- 

 tion, -tio, the arrangement of the 

 glands on a plant ; glandulif' erous, 

 -rus, gland-bearing ; glan'dulose, 

 'glaiidulu'sm, gland'aloas, glandular; 

 glan'duloso-serra'tua, having serra- 

 tions tipped or bordered with glands ; 

 Glaus (Lat.), a fruit one-seeded by 

 abortion, or a few-seeded dry inferior 

 indehiscent pericarp seated within 

 a cupular involucre, as th^ fruit of 

 the oak, nut, etc. 



gla'real {glarea, gi-avel), term em- 

 ployed by H. C. Watson for those 

 plants which grow oil dry exposed 

 ground, chiefly gravel or sand ; 

 gla'reose, glareo'sus, frequenting 

 gravel. 



Glass'wort Associa'tion, formed of 

 various species of tialicornia (Tans- 



ley). 



Glass'y Fir, an appearance found on 

 sawing tir wood, due to wood-cells 

 being filled with water and then 

 frozen. 



glauces'cent, glauces' ce)is {yKavK^s, 

 bluish grey), becoming sea-green ; 

 glauci'nus (Lat. ), bluish sea-green; 

 Glaucogonid'ium ( + Goniuium), the 

 bluish green gonidium of Lichens 

 (Bornet) ; glau'cous, -cics (1), sea- 

 green ; (2) covered with a bloom as 

 a plum or cabbage- leaf. 



Gle'ba ^Lat., a clod), the chambered 

 spoiogenous tissue within a sporo- 

 phore of Phalloideae; Glebe=GLEBA; 

 Gle'bula, (1) a synonym of Gleba ; 

 (2) the sporangia of certain Fungi, 

 as Nidularia ''i) a rounded eleva- 

 tion on the thallus of Lichens ; 

 gle'bulose, possessing a gleba, or 

 resembling it. 



gleiche'nioid, resembling or allied to 

 the ferrt genus GleLckenia. 



gleocap'soid {dZos, resemblance), like 

 the genus Gleocapsa. 



Gli'adin {yhia, glue), vegetable glue or 

 gelatin forming part of gluten ; 



Gli'an, the alcohol-soluble parr- of 

 gluten. 



Gli'ding-growth = Sliding Uhowtii. 



glit'tering, lustre from a polished siu'- 

 face which is not uniform. 



glo'bate {globus, a sphere), globular ; 

 Globes^ Grew's term for pollen- 

 grains ; Glo'bi spermat'ici, spores 

 of some Fungi (Lindley) ; Glo'boids 

 (eI5os, like), rounded masses of 

 mineral matter in proteid grains ; 

 glo'bose, globo'sus, nearly spherical ; 

 glob'ular, globiila'ris, spheroidal 

 in shape ; Glob'ule, the spheri- 

 cal antheridium in Characeae ; 

 Glob'ulet used by Gr^^w for (1) a 

 glandular hair, (2) a pollen-grain ; 

 Glob'ulin, (1) "round transparent 

 granules in cellular tissue, consti- 

 tuting fecula " (Henslow) ; (2) tlie 

 chief ingredient in alearone or 

 protein granules, occurring amor- 

 phous or as crystalloids ; (3) in 

 Lichens = Chlorophyll (Olivier) ; 

 glob'ulose, glubulo'sus, a diminutive 

 of GLOBOSE ; Glob'ulus (Lat., a little 

 globe), (1) used by M"ecker for the 

 fruit of Hepaticae ; (2) the deciduous 

 shield in some Lichens ; soredia. 



Glo'chid, Glochid'ium {yKcDX^s, an an- 

 gular end or barb), (1) a barbed 

 hair or bristle ; (2) a similar struc- 

 ture on the massulae of certain 

 Cryptogams which act as organs 

 of attachment to a macrospore ; 

 glochid'eous, zCus, glochid'iate, glo- 

 chidia'lns, pubescent with barbed 

 bristles ; Glo'ohis, a barb. 



Gloeoli'chenes {y\oihs, sticky), For- 

 sell's name for homoeomerous 

 Lichens, as Collemacei, Ascolichenes 

 with gonidia belonging to the Chro- 

 ococcaceae Gloe'ophyte {<pvThy, a 

 plant), Gobi's name for Thali-0- 

 I'HYTE ; Gloe'ospores, -ae (y\oia, 

 glue ; -f- Spora), plants having vis- 

 cid seeds (Clements) ; Gloiocar'pus 

 (/copirdy, fruit), a tetraspore (Lind- 

 ley). 



Glome [glomus, a ball), a rounded 

 head of flowers ; glom'erate, glom- 

 era'lics, agglomerate, collected into 

 heads; Glom'erule, Glomcnc'liis, (1) 



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