2,0 FLORA IN DIG A. 



NvcTANTHEs Hrfutcu IS' P-^^'a Po^^'' ^^^^^^' ^^^- ^^* P' 99- t- 48- 

 >^^/. i?//'/. 1602. Sonnerat, ii. 228. tab. 12S.— A lofty tree with a 

 thick licm. Flowers extremely fragrant. 



angtijlifolia, 16. Katu-pitfiegam Mulla, Rhecd. Mai. vi. p. 93. t. SZ- 

 Rail. Hiji. 1602. — Grows in the fandy foil near Cra?iganor. 



eIoiigc2(ii, Lirm. Suppl. p. 82. Berg. AB. AngAKX. p. 289. tab.xi.— 

 A tedious defcription without any hitlory. 



acuminata, Rumph.Amb. iv. p. 87. t. 39. 



trijiora, Burtn. Ind. iv. t. 2. 



ScHREBERA Swietenoides^ Rl.ofCoromandd/iu loi. 



Jasminum officinale, SyJl.Pl.'u 16. Fl.Coch.'i. 24. Bauh. Pin. ri^gj. 

 Gerard, 802.1 — The common Jafmine, for which we are beholden 

 to India. The ufe of its flowers in medicine now omitted in our dif- 

 penfatory. 



grandifloriim, 16. Bauh. Bin. \\. p. 1 01. Rai. HiJl. 1600. Pitlie- 

 gam Mulla, Rheed. Mai. vi. p. 91. Outlines of the Globe, i. p. 217. 



Azoriciwt, 16. Fl. Zeyl. 13. Biirman ZeyL 127. tab. 58. fig. i. 

 Outlines, i. p- 217. 



odoratijjimmn, 17. Mill. Di5t. n. 5. 



Chionanthus Zeylonica, 20. Fl. Zeyl, 14. Burm. Zeyl. 31. 



DiALiUM Indicum, 21. Cortex Papetarius, Rumph. Amb. iii. p. 212^. 

 t. 137. — Grows to be a lofty tree. 



JusTiciA Adhatoda, 40. Flor. Zeyl. 16. Malabar Nut, Miller DiSi. N" 4. 

 Kew Garden, \. p. 28. — Inhabits Malabar and Ceylon, yet will live 

 in England in the common green-houfe. In gardens fince 1699. 

 Once fuppofed to bear the leaf and nut of the Betel che-wed by the 

 Orientali/is. Ray, in HiJl. PI. iii. 651. fays that A hotoda fignifies 

 in the Malabar a medicine ufed to bring away a dead foetus, 



acaulis^ Linn. Suppl. p. 84. PI. of Cor. ii. 127. 



ciliaris, Linn. Suppl. p. 84. Burm. Zeyl. 88. t. 38. 



Tranquebarenfs^ Linn. Suppl. p. 85. 



JUSTICIA 



