232 GLOSSARY. 



Station : the particular place, or kind of situation, in which a plant naturally 



occurs. 

 Stellate, Stellular : starry or star-like ; where several similar parts epread out 



from a common centre, like a star. 

 Stem, p. 36, c. 



Stemless : destitute or apparently destitute of stem. 

 Sterile: barren or imperfect; p. 89. 



Stigma : the part of the pistil which receives the pollen ; p. 87. 

 Stiymdtic, or Stigmatose : belonging to the stigma. 

 Stipe (Latin stipes) the stalk of a pistil, &c., when it has any ; the stem of a 



Mushroom. 



Stipel: a stipule of a leaflet, as of the Bean, &c. 

 Stipellate: furnished with stipels, as the Bean and some other Leguminous 



plants. 



Stipitate: furnished with a stipe, as the pistil of Cleome, fig. 276. 

 Stipulate : furnished with stipules. 



Stipules: the appendages one each side of the base of certain leaves; p. 69. 

 Sto/ons : trailing or reclined and rooting shoots ; p. 37. 

 Stolomferous : producing stolons. 



Stomate (Latin fitoma, plural stomata) : the breathing-pores of leaves, &c. ; p. 156. 

 Strap-shaped; long, flat, and narrow; p. 106. 

 Striate, or Striated: marked with slender longitudinal grooves or channels 



(Latin sir ice). 



Strict : close and narrow ; straight and narrow. 



Strlgillose, Strigose : beset with stout and appressed, scale-like or rigid bristles. 

 Strobildceous : relating to, or resembling a 

 Strdbile : a multiple fruit in the form of a rone or head, as that of the Hop and 



of the Pine; fig. 314, p. 133. 



Strdphiole : same as caruncle. Strophiolate : furnished with a strophiole. 

 Struma : a wen ; a swelling or protuberance of any organ. 

 Style: a part of the pistil which bears the stigma ; p. 86. 

 Stylopodium : an epigynous disk, or an enlargement at the base of the style, 



found in Umbelliferous and some other plants. 



Sub-, as a prefix : about, nearly, somewhat ; as subcordate, slightly cordate : tub- 

 serrate, slightly serrate : subaxillary, just beneath the axil, &c., &c. 

 Suberose: corky or cork-like in texture. 

 Subclass, p. 177, 183. Suborder, p. 176. Snbtribe, p. 177. 

 Subulate : awl-shaped ; tapering from a broadish or thickish base to a sharp 



point ; p. 68. 

 Succulent: juicy or pulpy. 



Suckers: shoots from subterranean branches; p. 37. 

 Stiffrule'scent : slightly shrubby or woody at the base only ; p. 36. 

 Sugar, p. 163. 



Sulcate: grooved longitudinally with deep furrows. 

 Su/icrnumcniri/ Buds: p. 26. 



Supe'rvolute : plaited and convolute in bud ; p 110, fig. 225. 

 Supra-axillart/ : borne above the axil, as some buds ; p. 26, fig. 52. 

 Supra-decompound: many times compounded or divided. 



