APPENDIX II. 



-gonal, in composition signifies -angled. 

 Gregarious, occurring associated in large quantities, e.g., 

 the Sal tree. 



Gyncecium, the carpel, ovary or* assembly of carpels in a 

 flower, together with their appendages (style, stigma). 



Gynandrous, with the stamens adnate to the pistil. 



Gynandrophore, same as gonophore. 



Gynobasic, arising from the base of the carpel or ovary. 



GynopUore, an internode of the floral axis between the 

 stamens and the pistil, so that the pistil is considerably sepa- 

 rated from the stamens. Cp. gonophore. 



Hairy, clothed with somewhat long, not very dense hairs. 

 Op. pubescent, villous, etc. 



Haplochiamydeous, with only one whorl of perianth 

 leaves. 



Hastate, shaped like an arrow head in which the basal 

 lobes or auricles spread more or less at right angles to the 

 rest of the blade. 



Helicoid (cyme), a form of sympodial cymose branching 

 in which the newer axis always arises to the same side of the 

 parent axis, so that the sympodium becomes more or less 

 spiral, e.g., each half of a peaate leaf. Syn. bostrychoid. 



Hemicyclic, with some of the floral members whorled or 

 cyclic, and others spiral, e.g., with the calyx and corolla in 

 whcrls and the stamens and carpels spirally arranged as in 

 Clematidese. 



Hermaphrodite (flower), a flower in which both stamens 

 and ovary are present and functional 



Heterocnlamydeous, with the perianth distinctly differen- 

 tiated into a calyx and a corolla. 



Heterogamous (a term usually restricted to the flower- 

 heads of the Composite and the spikelets of grasses) where 



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