404. 



GLOSSARY. 



Scmlac, gen. -es, neut., cpi apparition, 

 visum ; gen. Gl. Mone, p. 402 b. ; 

 jieaylaces, Matth. xxiii. 25. Boat. p. 55, 

 7 ; accus. aeni5 j'cmlac, Quad. x. 1 ; 

 plur. -lacu, SMD. 27 b ; constr. neuter, 

 DD. 437 foot, M.Sp. 8, plur. Scmlac, 

 Quad. ix. 1. But see lyblacas, DD. 344. 



Scycel, dxtny, from Scitan. Quadr. iii. 

 14, xi. 13. Sec the passages, where 

 Somners notion of testiculus would 

 require some drying process not 

 mentioned. 



Scjimiman, to shrink, a synonym of Scjun- 

 can. Lb. I. xxvi., contents. " Skrim- 

 " pen, adj. som vrider eller undslaaer 

 " sig for Arbeide, som er meget kiselen 

 " eller emtaalig," Molbech, 07ie ivho 

 flindies from work, etc. Cf Shrammed, 

 chilled (pinched with cold, O.C.) Wilts. 

 Scrimd ; Devon, (heard by myself). 



Scpu)-, Gej'ceojiy, neut., scurf. Lb. II. 

 XXXV, lib. clxxxi. 3. 



Seaban, Sea'San, a feeling as if the cavity 

 of the body were full of water swaying 

 about, KKvSooves, unduJationes, Lb. I. 

 xiv. 



Sealh, Sealh, masc, gen. -ej*, the sallow, 

 salic-em, salix, of which seventy Eng- 

 lish sorts are reckoned. The termination 

 of the gen. shows the word is not fern., 

 and few names of trees are neuter. 



Red Sallow, Lacn. 89, Salix rubra. 

 See also S. repens, of Smith. 



Seaji, neut., gen. -ej-, juice. Hb. v. 2. 

 Lb. I. ii. 14, and frequently. 



Sees, masc, gen. -ej*, sedge; '^ car ex, 

 " gladiolus," Gl. in Lye ; masc. Lb. I. 

 xxiii. ; gen. I. xxxix. 



)>omopj-ecs, " hammer sedge." Lb. 

 I. Ivi. 2. Homop is probably a bird, as 

 in yellow hammer. " Scorellus, omem" 

 Gl. C. Emberiza. Of. clobhameji, Gl. 

 Mone, 315 a; also Gl. Dief. 



Reab sees, " red sedge," Lb. I. xxxix. 



Selyaere, gen. -a.n,uvcnafatua? wild oat? 

 Lb. I. xxxiii. 2 ; III. viii., and perhaps 

 by emendation for yeaXy ajcan, Lb. I. 

 xlvii. 2. 



f Sengian, singe ; see Bej'ensian ; ohg. 

 Sengjan, Biseugjan, and Bij-eng is what 

 grammarians would have end in a vowel. 



Sybe, masc, decoction, a.<pi^r]ixa, Hb. cliii. 4, 

 from Seo(San. 



Sibsam, Lb. II. Ixv. 5. 



^lye, sieve, constr. as neut. Lb.|I. xxxviii. 5, 

 as Germ. Sieb, neut. Yet Dutch Zeef is 

 fem. 



Syye'San, Siye'San, Sioye'Sau, pl. bran, fur- 

 fures. Boet. p. 91, line 23. Gl. Cleop. 

 In lib. civ. 1, it translates wjU'? A-i^cts, 

 which is said to be flour ; but here is a 

 tradition that it is bran. 



Siselh))eo]iva, gen. -an, masc. 1. Yellow 

 milfoil, Achillea tomentosa, masc, as 

 Lb. III. xxxii. In Hb. 1. =Heliotropion. 

 All plants turn to the sun, which of them 

 is meant ? In MS. V. " Achillea ser- 

 " rata " (II.) seems to be drawn ; the 

 other drawings do not at all resemble 

 this. " Eliotropia, sigelhverpha. Elio- 

 " trophus, sigel hveorfa. Nimphea, collon 

 " croh vel sigelhveorua. Solsequia, si- 

 " gel hveorua. Achillea, collon croch," 

 Gl. Dun. Most of these are translations, 

 and so equivalents : nymphea is the 

 yellow water lily, and croh is crocus, yel- 

 low also. The testimony of the drawing 

 falls in so well with that of the old 

 glossary, that we must accept Achillea ; 

 and as we must also attend to the hints 

 for yellowness, it must be A. tomentosa. 



2. Scorpiurus heliotropion, for Hb. 

 cxxxvii. is founded on Dioskorides, 

 ■i]\LOTp6TnovTo fxiyo.,0 %vLoi iKaXiaar <TKop- 

 iriovpov. The figure in MS. T. for art. 1. 

 agrees. The drawing in MS. V. art. 

 cxxxvii. is nearly destroyed, what re- 

 mains looks like "Polygonum convol- 

 " vulus." (H.) The "round' seed" 

 forbids us to think of sunflower, Ileliau- 

 thus, which is also Mexican. 



3. Cicliorium intybus? Often Turnsol 

 and Heliotrope in glossaries. So Germ. 

 Sonnen wendel (Adelung). 



4. Euphorbia helioscopia. 



A small Siselhpcojije, Lb. 1. xliv. 2. 



