140 



A MEDICO-BOTAXICAL GLOSSARV. 



Phcson \ i. lac feruens. 



Penfiligos uel panflligos-, flosmus^ 

 uel flos tapsi baibati idem, facit 

 magna folia subalba spissa pilosa, 

 5 foliis utimur. a^e. catteslayl. 



Peusedamum ^, cauda porcina, feni- 



cularis uel feniculus porcinus uel 



feniculus agrestis, masmaratrum ^, 



cauda pecorina idem, radice et 



10 semine utimur. 



Pes uituli ^ similis est iaro in foliis, nisi 

 quod iarus habet cornuta folia et 

 pes uituli uaria ; alio nomine dici- 

 tur interficiens patrem. angl. ston- 

 15 denegousse "^. [Respice in sati- 



rion.] 



Pes columbinus uel pes columbe 

 idem, folia habet diuisa in septem 



porciones et queUbet porcio habet 

 duas diuisiones uel iii. Florem 20 

 habet blaueum, [gall.] et anglice, 

 clauerfot l [Respice in flectidos et 

 in splecton.] 



Pes pulli", herba ter[r]estris idem, 

 crescit in montibus et in terris cul- 25 

 tis. g. pee de polayn ' uel pe de 

 clyual ", a. donnhoue uel wowell 

 uel feldhoue. [Respice in portu- 

 laca ^l] 



Pes milui ^^, i. herba calida, i. con- 30 

 trarca. 



Pes nisi " secundum aliquos est genus 

 narstucii aquatici. 



Pes uulturis similis est philipendule, 

 sed folia habet maius rotunda. 35 



Pes corui^^ uel pes coruinus idem. 



1. Phefon. 

 14. stondenegosse. 

 de chiual. 27. ffowelle 



6. Peucedanum. 9. porcina. radicibus, 11. nisi quia. 



21. balncum et dicitur anglice coluerfot. 26. pye de poleyn. pye 



30. catrarca. 34. pliilippendule. 35. magis. 36. cerui. 



^ Renzi, Coll. Salernit. iii. 307, ' Phephoii, id est lac fluens {var. fervens).' "^ See ante, 



Flosmus and App. Panfilogo. ^ <}>\6fios. * Diosc. iii. 82, mvKi^avov. ^ fiapaOpov. 



* See ante, larus. ' Gerarde, p. 219, 'Sweet CuUions, and Stander grasse ; in Dutch, 



Knave/icraut and Stondelcraut : in French, Satyrion.' Cotgrave, ' Satyrion : m. Satyrion, Rag- 

 Avort, Standlewort, Stander-grasse, Gander-goose.' " Read c!^/j/er/b/. Wright's Vocabularies 



(ed. Wiilcker), i. 131, 'Co/i/wfca, culfer. Palumbj/s, wudecwliTe.^ ib. i. K^j^,' Cohanbare, an''. a 

 culverhous.' Gerarde, Supplemcnt, ' C!//w;-wor/, Columbine.' " GeTaT(le,p.Sii, ' Tussilago 



or Fole-foot . . . is called in English, Fole-foot, Colts-foot, Horse-hoofe and Bull-foot.' Here 

 it is called both foal-hoof (reading ffowell or feldhoue) and donn-hoof. Donn or Dun seems to 

 have been an old name for horse : hence don-key, little horse. Donn-hoof has probably been cor- 

 rupted into tun-hoof, just as hay-hove (a name of ground-ivy) would seem to have been corrupted 

 into alehoof. See ante, Edera terrestris. ^" Cotgrave, ' Pied de poulain, Fole-foot, Colts- 



foot, Hall-foot, Hors-foot, BuU-foot.' ^' Pied de cheval. '- Bart. p. 34, 'Pes /?////, 



portulaca idem, purcelan.' 1= App. 'Pes milvi similis est iaro in foliis nisi quia iarus habet 



comuta folia et pes milui varia,' where it would seem that pes uitidi had become comipted into 

 pes inilui. ib. 'P wj7i/i, i. cetrach.' See ante, Catrarca. ^* MS. Sloane, 282, 'Pes n/s/, 



pulmonaria, pollitricum, si-erhaukesfote.' " Bart. p. 33, ' Pes corvi, i. apium emoroidaram.' 



