310 



IKDEX. 



Dioecious, Btaminate and pistillate flowers 

 on different plants, 137. 



Dionaea, 160. 



Dipterix, 125. 



Dipterous, with two wings. 



Dischidia, 199. 



Discoid Head. 146. 



Disk, a layer between the sta- 

 mens and ovary, Alchemilla. 

 184. 



Dissected, cut into deep lobes, incised, n 



Dis-ti-chous, arranged in two rows. k3 



Divaricate,wide-spread, straggling, 24. \% 



Divergent, spread g apart, more or less. Y 



Dock, 50, 208. 



Do-de-cath-e-on, 162, 168, 177. 



Dogtooth Violet, 29. 



Dorsal, on the back. 



Double Rose, 114. 



Double Pink, 82. 



Douglas Fir. 221. 



Downy, clothed with short, weak hairs. 



Dracdna, 258. 



Dragon's Blood, 258. 



Dragon's Root, 231. 



Drosera, 161. 



Drupe, a stone-fruit, as Cherry, Hickory. 



Dumb Cane, 283. 



Duramen, heartwood, 107. 



E. 



E. or Ex (in composition), without ; as 



Ebracteate, without bracts. A 



Elecampane, 147. iy) 



Elliptical, form of an ellipse. 



Elm, 36, 176. W; 



E16ngated, lengthened, extended, /y. Y 



Emarginate, notched at the end, /il 

 138. 



Embryo, straight ; convolute, 32, 

 40. 



Embryo coiled around 

 albumen. 



Enchanter's Night- 

 shade, 131. 



Endogens, 33, 229. 



Endogenous structure, 225. 



Ensiform, sword-shaped, 241. 



Entire Margin, even-edged, 31. 



Ephemeral, enduring for one day. 



Epi (in composition), upon, as 



Epidermis, same as cuticle. 



Epigda 158. 



Epi^ynous, upon the ovary, 184. 



Epilobium, 131. 



Epipetalous, upon the corolla. 



Epiphytes, Air Plants, 239. 



Equisetaceae. 27. [241. / 



Equitant, riding astride (aestivation), j 



Erica, 157. 



Eri6phorum, 270. 



Erose, eroded, as if gnawed. 



Erythrdnium, 30. 48, 351, 257. 



Eschsch61tzia, 71. 



Etiolated, whitened for want of light. 



Evanescent corolla, 170. 



Evening Primrose, 125, 168, 173, 193. 



Evergreen, 56. 



185, 216. 



Everlastings, 147. 



Exalbuminous, without albumen, 186. 

 Excaecaria, 207. [193, 218. 



Excurrent (stem), running to the top, 107. 

 Exogens, 220, 229. 

 Ex6genous structure, 108, 225. 

 Exserted, projecting out of or beyond. 

 Exstipulate, without stipules. 

 Extrorse (anthers), turned outward. 



F. 



Fagopyrum, 203. 



Falcate, scythe-shaped, curved, 206. 



Fascicle, a bundle, 46, 214. 



Fasciculate, in a bundle, 46. 



Feather-veined, see Pinni-veined. 



Ferruginous, color of iron-rust. 



Ferns, 20. 



Fertile (flowers), producing seed, 219. 



Fertilization, see Pollenization, 185, 2 



Feverfne, 147. 



Fibrils, the last division of roots, 20. 



Field Speedwell, 170. 



Fiu'worts, 174. 



Filament, the stalk of a stamen, 32. 



Filbert, 213. 



Filiform, slender like a thread, 14, 260. 



Filices, 2*5. 



Fimbriate, fringed, having the border 

 edged with slender processes, 97. 



Fir, 218 Douglas Fir, 22*. 



Fistular, hollow, as Wheat straw. 



Flabelliform. fan-shaped, 225. 



Flax, Toad, 173. 



Flax, New Zealand, 258. 



Fleur-de-lis (Flur-de-le), 241. 

 ; Floccous, with hairs in soft fleecy tufts. 

 ' Flora, (a) the spontaneous vegetation of 

 I a country ; (b) a written description of 

 the same. 



Floral envelopes, the sepals and petals. 



Florets, 138, 141. 



Florets of the disk, 141. 

 j Florets of the ray, 141. 

 I Flowerless Plants, 16. 



Flowers not made for man, 174. 



Flower Region, 29. 



Flowers regular, 73. 



Foliaceous, leaf -like in form or texture. 



Follicle, a dry, simple fruit,! -celled, 

 1-valved, several-seeded, 197. 



Fool's Parsley 137. 



Forked carpophore, 132. 



Fork-veined. 22. 



Fox Glove, 176. 



Fragaria, 105. 



Free, not adherent to other organs. 



Free Central Placenta, 163. 



Fringed ; see Fimbriate. 



Fritillaria, 258. [21. 



Frond, an organ serving as stem and leaf, 



Frutescent, shrubby. 



Fruit, &3. 



Fuchsia, 129. 



Fugacious, soon vanishing, 18. 

 ! Fulvous, dull yellowish-brown. 

 1 Fungi, 27. 



