518 



BURMA, ITS PEOPLE AND PRODUCTIONS. 



Choltc. 



Chitino. 

 C'lilorophyll. 



Chyle. 



Chyme. 



Clavicle. 



Cloaca. 



Coccyx. 



Coelcnterata. 



Colon. 



Columella. 



Commeusul. 



Condyle. 



Ctenoid 



Cycloid. 



Diastema. 



Digitigradc. 



Dioecious. 



Dolicoct'plialous. 



Duodenum. 



Elytra. 



Embryo. 



Eocene. 



Epiglottis. 



Epiphragm. 



Epithelium. 



Evolution. 



Ganglion. 



Gemmation. 



Gland. 



Glottis. 

 Hallux. 

 Haustcllum. 

 Hectocotylus. 



Hermaphrodite. 

 Heterocercal. 

 Homoccrcal. 

 Homology. 



Hydatid. 



Hyoid. 



Ileum. 



Imago. 



Ingluvies. 



Instinct. 



The anterior thoracic legs or claws of Crustacea. 



The substance composing the elytra of beetles. 



The gi-een colouring matter of leaves, and found also in tho 

 Infusoria and Turbellaria. 



The nutrient portion of the chyme, absorbed into the blood. 



The digested food as it passes from the stomach. 



The collar-bone. 



The common excretory opening of birds and reptiles. 



The anchylosed tail bones in some birds and juammals. 



Sponges, Hydrozoa and Corals. 



The large intestine opening into the rectum. 



The axis of a sjiiral univalve. 



An animal that lives witli, but docs not feed on, its host. 



Tho articulating surface of a bone. 



Scales of fish are so called which have a toothed hinder margin. 



Scales of fisli are so called which have entire margins. 



An interval in the line of the teeth. 



An animal that walks on its toes, as a cat. 



Animals or plants in which the sexes arc separate individuals. 



When the length of the cranium exceeds its breadth. 



The fii-st portion of the small intestine. 



The wing-covers of beetles. 



A young animal or plant before it is released from the egg, womb, 

 or seed. 



The earliest Tertiary period. 



A cartilaginous valve protecting the laryyix. 



The hardened secretion which closes tho shell of donnant snails. 



A thin membrane investing mucous surfaces. 



Tho descent by moditioation of species from a common ancestor. 



A thickening of a nerve, or a nervous centre. 



Iveproduction by means of a bud. 



An organ that secretes its peculiar fluid from the blood, as the liver 

 does gall. Some advanced thinkers regard the action of the 

 brain as analogous to that of a gland, its product being tlie 

 phenomena, comprehended under the term ' mind ' ; hence the 

 relation subsisting between the brain and the mental power 

 of an individual, and the dependence of mental and moral 

 disease, on the physical disease or degeneracy of the mental 

 organ or brain. 



The opening of the larynx. 



The great toe. 



The suctorial proboscis of insects. 



An arm of a cuttle-fish modified into a free reproductive organ, 

 and once regarded as a parasitical worm, residing on the 

 female cuttle-fish. 



Hn-ing the sexes united in the same individual. 



The tail of a fish is so called when its lobes are unequal, as in a shark. 



A tail of a fish is so called when its lobes are equal, as in most fishes. 



Identity of structure, notwithstanding diversity of foi'ra or function ; 

 for example, analogy there is none, but a strong homology, 

 between the horn of a rhinoceros and the hair of a man's head. 



A watery sac produced by entozoa. 



Tho bone of the tongue. 



Tho small intestine opening into the colon. 



The perfect insect, as a butterily. 



Tho 'crop'' of birds, a dilatation of (lie wsojihafjus. 



The unconscious cause of action as distinguished from the reflective 

 cause. 



