52 AN INTRODUCTION 
hollow Berry, as in Staphykea, Cardiofper= 
mum and Capsicum ; a Conceptacle, asin Ac- 
tea; a Legumen, as in Hymenea, Caffia, 
Inge, and Ceratonia; or a Strobilus, as in 
Annona and Funiperus. 
The Berry does not naturally burft, being 
foft, and the Difperfion of the Seeds being 
defigned to be by Means of Animals. 
The Berries in the Adonis of the Cape are 
evidently aggregate, many united in one. 
€ HA Pe Kix. 
Of AGGREGATE Fhwers. 
OMPLETE Flowers are either fimple 
or aggregate. Simple Flowers differ 
from aggregate in this, that they have not 
any Part of Frutification common to many 
Flowers, as is the Cafe with aggregate. 
Flowers are called aggregate, when many 
Plofculi, Florets, are, by the Mediation of 
fome Part of the Frudtification common to 
them all, fo united, that no one of them 
could be taken out without deftroying the 
Form of the whole, of which it was a Part. 
The common Part in aggregate Flowers is 
either the receptacle or the Calyx, A par- 
6 tial 
