Xll 



GLOSSARY. 



Callus . 



Cafia/iculaie 



Carina 



Ca?-iiiate 



Casfatieous 



Caudate 



Cheeks . 



Chitinous 



Ciliate 



Clavate 



Claws . 



Clypeus 



Coalesced 



Compressed 



Confluent 



Conical 



Connate 



Contiguous 



Contour 



Cordiforni 



Coriaceous 



Corneous . 



Costa . . 



Costula 



Coxa 



Crihrary 



Cristula 



Deflexed 



Dentate 



Deplafiate 



Disc 



Discreted 



Divergent . 

 Emarginate 



Entire . 

 Epitnemia 

 Epistoma . 



Epomiae 

 Explanate 



A small callosity immediately before radix of fore wing. 



Furrowed ; elongately impressed. 



A keel, ridge or elevated line. 



Keel-like ; with a raised line. 



Chestnut-red. 



In the form of a tail. 



That part of the head between the base of the mandibles 

 and the lower margin of the eyes. 



Pertaining to chitin, of which the exoskeleton of insects 

 is composed ; presenting a hard surface. 



Fringed with hairs or cilia, like an eye-lid. 



Clubbed. 



The little hooks at the apices of the tarsi. 



That part of the head between the face and the mouth. 



Intermingled ; run together ; having become common. 



Squeezed laterally ; higher than broad. 



Intermingling ; becoming common. 



Cone-shaped. 



Inflexibly soldered together. 



Touching ; in close proximity. 



General outline or shape. 



Heart-shaped. 



Presenting a surface like that of leather. 



Horny. 



A small elevated ridge ; rarely used of the front edge of 

 the wing. 



Exclusively used to denote the little costa separating the 

 externo-medial metathoracic areae into two parts {cf. 

 details post'). 



The first or basal joint of the leg, that nearest the thorax. 



Pertaining to the mouth. 



A little and usually elongate crest. 



Bent downwards. 



Toothed. 



Depressed or flattened dorsally. 



The central region. 



Separated, usually by an impressed line ; in the case of 

 the petiolar area it indicates that there are present two 

 longitudinal carinae dividing it into three parts. 



Spreading apart ; not parallel. 



With the margin not continuous, generally centrally 

 notched. 



Without excision, emargination or projection. 



The elevated anterior margin of the mesosternum. 



The central, and often longitudinally elevated, portion of 

 the face. Gravenhorst calls the whole front of the 

 head, from the frons to the mandibles, the facies or 

 hypostoma. Berthoumieu writes " L'epistome ou 

 clypeus." 



The elevated margin of an oblique furrow in the pro- 

 pleurae for the reception of the front femora. 



Widened out ; expanded. 



