206 INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 
Leatherlike, coriacea. Camellia Japonica, Hura cre- 
- pitans. 
Fungous, corklike, fungosa, suleresa. Tulipa, Lilium, 
Tris. a 
Pulpy, pulposa. Juicy externally, giving the seed the 
appearance of a stone-fruit. Ixia Chinensis, Punica Gra- 
natus, Magnolia. ; 
Bladdery, vesicularis. Membranaceous, and much larger . 
than the parts they cover. Philadelphus coronarius. 
- FLESH OF THE SEED. 
Sarcodermis. 4 parenchymatous substance, placed between 
the outer and inner skin of the seed, frequently scarcely visible, 
but sometimes very apparent. Iris teetidissima. 
INNER SKIN. 
Tegmen, Endopleura, Tunica interior, Integumentum, 
Hiloferus. 4 thin pellicle placed next the kernel, scarcely 
separable from the flesh of the seed, and which, notwithstand- 
ing its appearance, is not permeable to moisture. Pl. 15, 
fig. 22 b. 
Membranaceous, Tegmen memlranaceum. Nymphea 
alba, Amygdalus, Cerasus, Castanea vesca, Fagus sylvatica. 
Paperlike, chartaceum. Dry, smooth, flexible, tough . 
like a card or parchment. Pyrus communis, 
Leatherlike, coriaceuwm. Cocos nucifera. 
Crustaceous, crustaceum. Areca Faufel. 
Cobweblike, arachnoideum. Ixia Chinensis. 
Partition-bearing, septiferum. Expanding internally in 
the form of incomplete partitions, that divide the kernel 
into several lobes. Castanea vesca, Juglans regia. 
Gummy, gummatum. Covered with a gummy substance. 
Pyrus Cydonia. 
Distinct, a loricd distinctum. Separable from the outer 
skin, without any tearing. Nympheea, Hydrocharidez. 
Coherent, lorice coherens. Not separable from the outer 
skin without tearing. Citrus, Murraya. 
