tripn-yl’-la_ ... 
trip-in-na’-ta... 
trip’-lex be? 
trip-lin-er’-vis 
tri-quet’-rum ... 
tris-er-i-a’-lis 
Tris-tan’-i-a 
tris’-tis ae 
TP)’ =b8 ... 
Trit-ax’-is 
trit-er-na’-ta ... 
Tri-um-fet’-ta 
troch-le-a’-ris 
tro’-glod-yt-a’-rum 
trul-lif-or’-mis 
trun-ca’-tum 
Tsi-e’-la 
tub-a’-ta 
tub-ze-for’-mis 
tu-ber’-cul-a’-tus 
tu-ber-0o’-sa 
tub-if-lo’-ra 
tub-ul-o’-sa ... 
tul’-da... 
tu-lip-if’-er-a.. 
tum-bug- eee 
tup’-1u 
tur-bin-a’-ta.. 
tur’-gid-a 
Taor’-ner-a 
'Tur-ner-a’-ce-ce 
Tur’-ner-v 
tur’-peth-um... 
Tur-pin’-i-a ... 
Tur-re’-a 
Tweed-i-a’-na 
Tyl-oph’-or-a ... 
PRONUNCIATION AND DERIVATION. 101 
(Greek), with three leaves, or leaflets ; 
... (Latin), tripinnate, when the leafiets of a bi-pinnate leaf them- 
selves become pinnate ; 
«. (Latin) (g. triplicis), triple ; 
.. (Latin), same as triplicostate (q.v.) ; 
(Latin), three angled, with faces concave rendering the angles 
salient (H.);. 
(Latin), in three rows ; 
(com.) Jules M. C. Tristan [(pr:) ZGhyl Tree—starng], 
1776—1861, French Botanist (N. 4/98) ; 
(Latin), sad, Sombre in aspect ; 
(Latin), common ; 
tri—, taxis (Greek), three-foid (prefix), arrangement; (all:) 
stamens in three whorls, normally with the central, some- 
times with all, filaments forming a column, ovary 3-celled ; 
(Latin), triternate, when a common rachis (q.v.) is divided 
into three secondary rachides, which are each sub-divided 
into tertiary rachides, each of which bears three leaflets ; 
(com.) Giov. Batt. Trionfetti, 1658—1708, Italian botanist and 
author (N. 4/95) ; 
.. (Latin), pulley shaped, circular, compressed, contracted in the 
middle of its circumference, 80 as to resemble a pulley ; 
troglodutai (Greek), cave-dwellers ; name of the old inhabit- 
ants of the west coast of the Arabian Gulf, in A‘thiopia 
(Cass. Lat. Dic.) ; 
(Latin), ladle shaped, roundish and coneave with a projecting 
bandle ; 
(Latin), truncate, ending abruptly as if with the end (or top) 
cut oft (H.) ; 
chéla (Malayalam), cloth; (all:) bark of the tree fibrous, and 
occasionally made into a kind of cloth (McL. 932) ; 
... | (Latin), trumpet shaped, hollow and dilated at one extremity 
} like the end of a trumpet ; 
(Latin), furnished with tubercles, or wart-like exerescences 
(H.) ; 
(Latin), furnished with tubers, or swollen parts of roots or under- 
ground stem (H.) ; 
(Latin), with tubular flowers; 
(Latin), twhular; 
(Bengali), native name of the bamboo ; 
(Latin), producing flowers like the Tulip (a kind of cup-shaped 
lily) ; 
mae tinbygai (Tamil), name of the tree ; 
taparu (Canarese) austere ; (all:) pulp of the fruit ; 
... (Latin), spinning-top shaped, inversely conical, with a con- | 
traction towards the point ; 
(Latvn), Swollen; 
.. (com.) William Turner, Prebendary of York, Canon of 
Windsor, author of ‘‘ New Herbal”, died 1568 (Br. 87); 
(Latin), Turnera Family, or Order ; 
(com.) of Mrs. Charles Turner, wife of the celebrated flori- 
culturalist of Slough, Backs, England; , 
trivrit (Sanskrit [through turbud (Arabic) ]) three, eaisting ; (all :) 
threé-fold medical property, antiphlegmatic, antibilious and 
cathartic (McL. 9238) ; 
(com.) P. Turpin [(pr :) Toor-pang}j, French Lbtanibal artist 
and naturalist, died 1840 (N, 4/116) ; 
(com.) George Turra, Professor of Botany at Padua in Italy, 
author of many botanical works, 1607—1638 (N. 4/116) ; 
s. (com.) of Tweedie ; traveller in Chili and botanist ; 
... tulos, phores (Greek), swelling, to bear; (all:) coronal lobes 
(N. 4/118) ; 
. 
. 
