DICTIONARY OF - 
3. Dovsiy-winerp (duplicato-pinnatum) .(bi-pinnatum) 
when a leaf-stalk has lateral ribs, and each of these ribs 
forms a winged leaf ; example Tansey, Yarrow, PI, 8. £.56. 
For leaves more than doubly compound, see TripLy-Com- 
“POUND. 
Down (pappus) the fine hair or feather-like substance crown- 
ing the seeds of some plants, and enabling the wind 
to scatter them abroad. In Sow-thistle it consists of 
simple or undivided hairs, but in the Goatsbeard it is 
branched, and then is called feathered down. PI. 4. f. 22, 
(7.) Pl. 6. f. 2. (a. 6.) 
Downy (leaf) see Cottony. ; 3 
Droopine (nutans) for such is the most exact meaning of 
the term when applied to a Panicle, as it frequently is 
when speaking of the Grafses, whose spikets often hang 
down in a beautiful pensile form. 
‘Drupa,a pulpy seed-vefsel without valves, consisting of a hard 
nut or stone, encompafsed by a pulpy substance; exem- 
plified in the Plumb, the Cherry, and the Peach. P1.5. f, 21. 
Durticatus, doubled. 
DuPLicatTo-cRENATUM, doubly scolloped. 
PinnatuM, doubly winged, 
SERRATUM, doubly serrated. _ 
———— TERNATUM, doubly three-fold. 
Dust, see Pollen. > ; . 
_ Dustep (pulveratus) some plants appear as if covered with a 
kind of dust or powder ; e. g. the English Mercury, and the 
leaves of the Auricula. : 
Ear-sHaPED (auriculatus) somewhat resembling a human 
ear, It is also used to exprefs a little appendage at the 
base of a leaf or leafit. ' : 
EsRacreartvus, without any floral leaf, — 
EcALCARATA, without a spur or horn. 
EcuInatus, set with prickles, ais ie 
Eec-sarep (ovatus) signifies a shape resembling the solid 
substance of an egg, as the seed-bud of Jacob's Ladder, 
and the seeds of Fennel ; or it implies only the form of an — 
egg, if divided longways, as in the leaves of the Beech- 
tree or Peppermint. PI.7.£.3. , 
FERS EARE A PED (ovato-lanceolatum.) See spear-cggr 
shaped, 
ELLirricum, see oval. 
EMARGINATUM, notched at the end. 
Empracine (amplexicaulis) the Srem; when the base of 2 _ 
leaf nearly surrounds the stem, as in Solomon's Seat, 
Poppy, and Borrage. PI, 9, f, 4. (f-) 
EMPALEMENT, see Calyx, 
ENERVIUM, nervelefs, 
ENNEAGYNIA, 9 Pistils, 
