204 GLOSSARY. 



Aculeate : armed with prickles, i. e. aculei ; as the Rose and Brier. 



Aculeolate : armed with small prickles, or slightly prickly. 



Acuminate: taper-pointed, as the leaf in fig. 97 and fig. 103. 



Acute: merely sharp-pointed, or ending in a point less than a right angle. 



Adelpkous (stamens) : joined in a fraternity (adef,phia) : see monadelphous and 

 diaddphous. 



Adherent: sticking to, or, more commonly, growing fast to another body ; p. 104. 



Adnate: growing fast to ; it means born adherent. The anther is adnate when 

 fixed by its whole length to the filament or its prolongation, as in Tulip- 

 tree, fig. 233. 



Adpressed, or oppressed: brought into contact, but not united. 



Adscendent, ascendent, or ascending : rising gradually upwards.. 



Adsurgent, or assurgent : same as ascending. 



Adventitious: out of the proper or usual place; e. g. Adventitious buds, p. 26, 27. 



Adventive : applied to foreign plants accidentally or sparingly spontaneous in a 

 country, but hardly to be called naturalized. 



^Equilateral : equal-sided ; opposed to oblique. 



^Estivation: the arrangement of parts in a flower-bud, p. 108. 



Air-cells or Air-passages : spaces in the tissue of leaves and some stems, p. 143. 



Air-Plants, p. 34. 



Ake'nium, or akene. Sec achenium. 



Ala (plural ahe) : a wing; the sidvpetals of a papilionaceous corolla, p. 105, 

 fig. 218, w. 



Alabdstrum : a flower-bud. 



Alar: situated in the forks of a stem. 



Alale: winged, as the seeds of Trumpet-Creeper (fig. 316) the fruit of the Maple, 

 Elm (fig. 301), &c. 



Albescent : whitish, or turning white. 



Absorption, p. 168. 



Albumen of the seed : nourishing matter stored up with the embryo, but not 

 within it; p. 15, 136. 



Albumen, a vegetable product; a form of proteine, p. 165. 



Albuminous (seeds) : furnished with albumen, as the seeds of Indian corn (fig. 38 

 39), of Buckwheat (fig 326), &c. 



Alburnum: young wood, sap-wood, p 153 



Alpine: belonging to higli mountains above the limit of forests. 



Alternate (leaves): one after another, p. 24, 71. Petals are alternate icith the 

 sepals, or stamens with the petals, when they stand over the intervals be- 

 tween them, p. 93. 



Alrrolatf.: honeycomb-like, as the receptacle of the Cotton-Thistle. 



Ament: a catkin, p. 81. Amentaceous: cntkin-like, or catkin-bearing. 



Amorfihoiis : shapeless; without any definite form. 



Amphi(jdstrium (plural amphigastria) : a peculiar stipnlo-likr leaf of ccrtaii 

 Liverworts 



Amphftropous or A mphffropaf ovules or seeds, p. 12.T, Pi jr. 272. 



Ample-riant : embracing. Ampterirnul (lonvos) : Hasping the stem by the base. 



Ampnlldcroits : swelling out like a bottle or 



Amylaceous : composed of starch, or starch-like. 



