A MEDICO-BOTANICAL GLOSSARV. 



49 



lO 



Draconea ^ interpretatur asperitas 

 palpebrarum, inde collirium 

 draomaticum ^ ut in Alexandro 

 de oculis. 

 5 Den lecnis^ capud monachi idera, cui 

 folium lactessit in fractione. galle, 

 dent de lion, anglice doleroune*. 

 Dens equinus^ uel dens equi, sul- 

 phuraca*^ herba, muscus ^ de capo 

 idem. Stipitem habet rubeum, 

 crescit ad modum ciceris et habet 

 folia minuta sicut trifolium et flo- 

 rem croceum. angl. tynt[h]are. 



Dendrolibanum", libanotidos' uel li- 



banlus, ros marini [idem]. ^^. eti^ 



a^s. Ros[e]maryn^'\ 

 [Dens cabellinus^\ respice in iusqui- 



amus"^. 

 Derta i. serpigo, respice in zerna".] 

 Deronica^* uel ueronica radix est 20 



parua utroque capite gracilis, in 



medio uero lacior. 

 Derma' i. cutis, inde ostrocoderma^'' 



i. piscis degens in conchis uel 



habens durum corium. 25 



Dentale^'' lapis est. 



1. Dracoma. 3. dracomaticum. 5. dens. 

 9. campo. 14 libanotitos. 15. ros marinus. 



6. cuius folium. lactescit. 7. lyon. 



11. gracilis et medio. 



^ Bart. p. 18, ' Dracoma dicitur asperitas palpebrarum, inde collirium dracomaticum.' 

 rpaxojfia. ^ KoWovpiov TpaxojpMTiKov, Alex Trall. (ed. Puschmann), vol. ii. p. 49. 



^ Gerarde, p. 291, ' Dens Leonis or Dandelion . . . also called . . . in shops Taraxacon, Caput 

 monachi, Rostrum porcinum and Urinaria.' * E. P. N. p. 6, 'Perdicalis, \i is Dolhrune.' 



Parkinson, Theat. Bot. p. 7S1, ' they . . . suppose it (Dandelion) to be the . . . Perdion (rather 

 Perdicion) of Theophrastus.' ^ Bart. p. 17, ' Dens equinus, sulphuraca idem.' Renzi, 



Collect. Salernit., ' Dens equinus, sulfurica herba, muscus de campo {var. muscus triangularis vel 

 cyperus) idem.' Sim. Jan. ' Dens eqin/ius a quibusdam vocatur sulfuraca, planta juxta pluvios 

 nascens.' ^ Sim. Jan. ' Sulfuracha a quibusdam vocatur dens equinus. Paulus ca. de 



pleuresi.' Matth. Silv. c. dclix, ' Sulfurata est species trifolii habens odorem sulfuris, 1. 

 handachacha' i.e. lotus or trifolium.' cf. Diosc. iii. 113, and Plin. Hist. Nat. xxi. 9. Perhaps the 

 Trifolium bituminoijim of Gerarde, p. 1187; or his Trifolium odoratum, p. 1195. ^ Probably 



from the smell : see post, Muscus. * 5tv5po\il3avos. Bart. p. 17, ' Dendrolibanum, i. ros 



marinus.' App. ' Dentrolibanum.' * Xifiavajris. Cf. Diosc. iii. 79. Bart. p. 28, 



' Libanotides, i. ros marinus.' App. ' Libarutidos, i. ros marinus.' '" Gerarde, p. 1293, 



'Rosemary is called in Greeke Xi^avoris (sic) ari<pavwixajiKr] . . . in French and Dutch, Rosemarin. 

 " Gerarde, p. 355, ' Henbane is called . . . of Matthjeus Sylvaticus, Dens caballinus, Miliman- 

 drum, Cassilagc' ^^ vos vd^oy, Diosc. iv. 69. " Cass. Felix, (ed. Rose), c 11, 



'Impetigines quas Grseci lichenas vocant, Latini vulgo zernas appellant : ' ib p. 258, where it is 

 compared with the Spanish Sarna. '* Apparently a corrupt form of Beronica. 



* Upfxa. 1" 6(xrpaK65fpfj.a, Arist. Hist. Anim. iv. i. 4: cf. Bart. p. 33, ' Ostrea, piscis 



degens in concha.' '^ The buccinum of Plin. Hist. Nat. ix. 36. See ante, Antale. 



Bart. p. 1 7, ' Dentale, lapis est.' 



'H [I\'2-] 



