90 . DICTIONARY OF 
The Elder, the Gelder Rose, and the Laurustinus, are in= 
stances. Pl. 6.f.10. iv 2 it 
Tunicat vs,coated. {2st} z<00 
TURBINATUS, top-shaped ; nearly conical. 
_ Turerpvs, swollen, turgid. 6 
_ TuRrzio, a young unexpanded shoot, as is the Asparagus in the 
state it is gathered for eating. 28249 
TwininG (volubilis) twisting round other bodies, and ascending 
ina spiral line. Some plants twine from. the left to. 
right, thus, ¢ in the direction of the sun’s apparent mo- 
tion, when the spectator faces the South, as Hop, Hom 
suckle, and Black Briony. Others twine from the right. 
the left, thus ) contrary to the sun’s apparent motion, a 
Bindweed and Scarlet Kidney Bean. Pl. 10. £. 5.5 00> 
- Twin-Fork (bigeminus) see Dousny Compounp LEAvEs. 
Two-EDGED (anceps) as the s 
os into several smaller fruit-stalks, and these smaller set 
flowers are called Umbellules >, Hemlock, Carrot, am 
Angelica, furnish instances. The fruit-stalks of an Umbe 
are called Spokes. Pl. 6. f. 9. (b. 6. b.b.) Those of 
Umbellule, Spokets, or little Spokes. . > aed 
Umaiticatus, resembling a navel ; dimpled. 
Un-anGuLatvus, one-edged. oe et agreed 
Unarmep (inermis) without weapons of defence. — 
WEAPONS, spe 
_ Uncrnatus, hooked at the end, 
Unpatus, waved, . ee 
Unpver-survus (suffrutex) like a shrub in its woody texturt 
at the bottom, but the top shoots herbaceous, tender 
dying in the winter. . Lavendar is an example. 
UnDIvIDED, see simple, ia bbe 
UNEQUAL FLORETS (radiati) when an Umbel is not composed 
of equal florets, but those in the circumference are larget 
than those in the centre, and the outer petals are large” 
and different in shape from the inner petals. As in the 
Carrot and Cow-parsnep. See Rapiate, for Linnwus 
the same term (radiatus) to exprefs the difsimilarities 
the florets in the umbelliferous plants of the Clafs Pentan” 
