534 



GT.OSSAUY AND 1XDKX. 



Fdveafe : pitted, having fovea or depres- 

 sions of the sin face. 



Fdrcojate : marked with little pits or de- 

 pressions ( fovc'ohe). 



Fovulce: minute particles in the fluid 

 contained in pollen, 23G. 



Fice: separate; not united with dis- 

 similar parts, 250. 



Fringed: sec Fimbriate. 



Fioncl: the foliage or Ferns (500), 

 Liverworts (504), &c., G7. 



Fi ondesrencc : the act of leafing. 



Frondose: leafy, or more commonly it 

 now means frond-like, or producing 

 a fiond instead of ordinary foliage, 

 504. 



Fructification : fruiting, or the fiuit and 

 what attends it. 



Fructification, organs of: the stamens 

 and pistils. 



Fruit, 308. 



Fiuit-dots, of Ferns, 501. 



Fi umentuccous : producing starch, or re- 

 lating to corn (fumentum). 



Fi itstulose : consisting of small portions 

 or fragments. 



Frutescent : becoming shrubby. 



Fruticulose : very small and shiubby. 



Fi ilticosc : shrubby ; relating to a 



Frulex : a shrub. 



Fucacea 1 , 509. 



Fugacious: falling off or perishing very 

 early, as the calyx of the Poppy, 

 and the corolla of Cistus ; 172. 



Fulci ate : belonging to or fui nished with 

 fulcra (props), i. c. with append- 

 ages such as tendrils, prickles, stip- 

 ules, &c. 



Fuliginous, or fuliainose : sooty ; dark 

 and dee]) brown. 



Falcons : tawny : orange-yellow mixed 

 with gray. 



FumaiiaceiB, 389. 



Fundamental organs, 70. 



Fungi, 507. 



Fung form : mushroom-shaped. 



Fnngiilform : diminutive of the last. 



Fnmjose : spongy in texture. 



Funiculus: the seed-stalk, 297,321. 



Funnel-shaped, funnel foi in : see Infun- 

 dibuliform, 277. 



Furcate: forked, the forks spreading. 



Fiuf nacrous : scuify. 



Fun owed : sec S ul catc. 



Fusions : grayish-brown. 



FiUufmm /spindle-shaped ; 84, fig. 13S. 



Fustic, 475. 



Galbanum, 427. 



Galhulns : a fleshy and closed strobile 

 imitating a bciry, as a Juniper- 

 be rrv, 320. 



Galea : a helmet ; an arched sepal or 

 petal,' 278, fig. 458. 



Giiha'e: having, or shaped like, a hel- 

 met. 



Galingalc, 490. 



Galls,'"477. 



Gamboge, 400. 



Ga'mo/iliij/lous : composed of leaves 

 united by their edges, 275. 



Gamopetalous : composed of united pe- 

 tals, 249, 275. 



Gamose'palous : of united sepals, 249. 



Gelatinous coils in cells, 40. 



Geminate : in pairs. 



Gemma : a bud or growing point. 



Gemination : budding growth, 31. 



Gc'iiimule : a young bud ; the plumule. 



Genera: plural of genus. 



General : the opposite of partial ; as the 



Gcneial involucre of a compound um- 

 bel, &c. 216. 



Generic: relating to the genus. 



Geniculate: bent abruptly like a knee. 



Gcntianaccrc, 45G. 



Gentianinc (Gentian), 457. 



Genus, 358. 



Geographical Botany : the study of 

 plants in respect to their geograph- 

 ical distribution. 



Gcraniacea:, 403. 



Get in : the eye of a bud ; or any glow- 

 ing point ; or an embryo, 323. 



Germen : an old name for the ovary. 



Germinal vesicle, 306 



Germination : growth of the embryo 

 from the seed, 71, 328. 



Gerontoijieoas : belonging to the Old 

 World. 



Gesneiiacece, 44. 



Gibbei : an enlargement, or gibbosity 

 of any sort, on one side of a calyx, 

 a fruit, &c. 



Gibherose or gibbous: swollen or en- 

 larged on one side. 



Gills of Fungi, 500. 



Ginger, 490. 



Ginseng, 428. 



Glabi ou's : smooth, i. c. destitute of hair- 

 iness. 



Gfabiate: smoothed, or becoming near- 

 ly glabrous. 



Glddiate : sword-shaped. 



Glands : any secreting apparatus, 52. 

 The name is also given to any pro- 

 jection or appendage the nature 

 and function of which is not obvi- 

 ous, 264. Glans is also the classi- 

 cal name of an acorn and chestnut. 



Glandular, glandnlifcrons, glandnlose : 

 healing glands, or gland like in 

 texture 



Glandulai hairs, 52. 



