Study-set 



subcespitose 



Stud'y-set, the principal set of a col- 

 lector's plants, enriched by notes. 



stuffed, solid, farctate (Crozier). 



Stu'pa or Stup'pa (Lat., the coarse 

 part of flax), a tuft or mass of hair 

 or filaments matted together ; 

 stu'peous, stu'peus or stup'peus, 

 woolly ; stu'pose, stupo'sus, tow- 

 like, with tufts of long hairs. 



styg'ius (Styx, Stygis, an infernal 

 river), used of plants which grow 

 in foul waters. 



sty'lar (stylus, from o-rOAos, a column), 

 relating to the Style, as ~ Brush, 

 the collecting hairs of flowers, cf. 

 COLLECTORS ; <~ Canal, the tube or 

 loose tissue through which the 

 pollen- tubes pass ; ~ Col'umn, the 

 column of Orchids ; ~ Foot = STY- 

 LOPODIUM ; styla'tus (Lat.) = STY- 

 LOSUS ; Style, Sty'lus, (1) the usually 

 attenuated part of a pistil or carpel 

 between the ovary and the stigma ; 

 <~ of Hepaticae, = INTERLOBULE ; <~ 

 of Mosses, (1) an old term for the 

 neck of the archegonium ; (2) the 

 ostiole of certain Fungi (Lindley) ; 

 Style-ta'ble, used by Haworth for 

 the flattened apex of the style in 

 Asclepiads ; sty'liform, styliform'is 

 (forma, shape), style - shaped, 

 drawn out; styliferous (fero, I 

 bear), bearing a style ; styli'nus 

 (Lat.), belonging to the style ; Sty- 

 lis'cus = STYLAR CANAL ; stylo' - 

 deus (Lat.), furnished with a style; 

 Stylogonid'ium (+ GONIDIUM), a 

 gonidium formed by abstriction 

 from special hyphae in such Fungi 

 as Aecidiomycetes and Basidiomy- 

 cetes, that is, uredo-, teleuto-, and 

 basidio-spores ; Sty'lopod, Stylo- 

 pod'ium (TTOVS, irodbs, a foot), the 

 enlargement at the base of the 

 styles in Umbelliferae ; sty'lose, 

 stylo' 'sus, having styles of a remark- 

 able length or persistence ; Stylo- 

 spore ((rTropa, a seed), a spore borne 

 on a filament ; adj. stylospo'rous ; 

 Stylosteg'ium (ffT^yrj, a roof), a 

 peculiar hood surrounding the 

 style, as in Asclepiads ; Styloste'- 

 mon J (ffT-/]fj.uv, a filament), an 



epigynous stamen ; styloste'mus, 

 hermaphrodite ; Styloteg'ium (rtyos, 

 a covering) = STYLOSTEGIUM. 



styp'ticus (Lat., from ffTVTrriKos), 

 astringent ; usually implies use to 

 stanch a wound. 



Sty'rax, or Stor'ax, (1) a solid resin 

 from Styrax officinale, Linn. ; (2) 

 at the present day a similar balsa- 

 mic resin from Liquidambar sty- 

 raciflua, Linn. 



styrido'pliytus (aravpds, a cross, 

 <f>vTov, a plant), with cruciform 

 petals (Henslow). 



suav'eolent, suav'eolens (Lat.), sweet- 

 smelling, fragrant. 



sub (Lat.), under or below, in com- 

 pounds usually implies an approach 

 to the condition designated, some- 

 what, or slightly; subacau'lis ( + 

 ACAULIS), with the stem hardly 

 apparent; sub'acute (+ ACUTE), 

 somewhat acute ; subaer'ial (aerius, 

 airy), situated almost on the ground 

 level, as a rhizome which is covered 

 with leaves, etc., but above the 

 soil ; subapicula'ris ( + APICULARIS), 

 when the stem is prolonged be- 

 yond an inflorescence without 

 branch or leaf ; subapic'ulate, with 

 an ill-defined point ; subarbores'- 

 cent (+ ARBORESCENT), with a 

 tendency to become somewhat 

 tree - like ; subarchespor'ial ( + 

 ARCHESPORTAL) Pad, Bower's term 

 for a cushion-like group of cells 

 below the archesporium in Lyco- 

 podium; subax'ile (+ AXILE), 

 nearly axile ; subaxillary, below 

 the axil ; subbiator'ine ( + BIATO- 

 RINE), somewhat as in the Lichen 

 genus Biatora ; subbilocula'ris ( + 

 BILOCDLARIS), with partitions 

 which do not quite join, but leave 

 a small interval ; subbys'soid ( + 

 BYSSOID), somewhat cobwebby ; 

 subbif ido - rum'pens J (+ BIFI- 

 DUS), " bursting into somewhat 

 two divisions" (Lindley); sub- 

 caules'cent (+ CAULESCENT), with 

 a very short stem, a trifle more 

 developed than acaulescent ; sub- 

 ces'pitose (+ CAESPITOSE), some- 



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