796 JOURNAL, BOMBAY NATVRAL HIST. SOCIETY, Vol. XXIV. 



Genus and Authok. Natukal Date. Dekivation and Common Name, 

 Order. 



Tru/onostemon,'B\. . . Euphor. 1825. 



Triphasia, Lour.f . ■ Ruta. 1790. 



Tripogon, Roth. . . Gram. 1821 . 



Tristachta, Nees. ..Gram. 1829, 



Tristellateia, Thouars. . Malpigh. 1806 . 

 Triticum, L, ..Gram. 1735. 



Triumpetxa, (Plum.) Til. 1787. 



L. 



Tropaeolum, L. . . Gerau. 1737 



TuBiFLORA,* Gmel. . . Acantli. 1791 . 



Turnera, (Plum.) L. . . Turnera. 1737. 



TuRPiNiA, Vent.t . . Sapincl. 1803. 



TuRR^A, L.t ..Melia. 1771. 



Tydsea, Decne. . . Gesner. 1848. 



Tylophora, R. Br.f . . Asclep. 1809. 



Typha, L.f 



..Typha. 1735. 



Typhonium, Schott. . . Araceee. 



1829, 



so called from the tnangular 

 stamens ; Cooke does not des- 

 cribe the stamens as such. 



tiiphasios, tripple ; see the sepals 

 and petals. — N. 



from treis and pogon, alluding to 

 the three bristles of the lower 

 valves. 



in allusion to the spikelets being 

 in clusters of three at the tips 

 of the branchlets of a raceme. 



the old Latin name for wheat, and 

 probably from tritus, ground. — 

 N. Wheat. 



after Giov. Batt. Trionfetti. 

 1658-1708, an Italian botanist, 

 — N. 



tropaion, a trophy ; the leaves are 

 of the form of a buckler, and 

 the flowers of a helmet. — N. 

 Indian Cressor Yelloiu Larkspur. 



tubes, tube, flora, flower, 



after William Turner, a herbalist, 

 died in 1568.— N. 



after P. Turpin, a French botani- 

 cal artist, died in 1840. — N. 



after George Turra, 1607-1688, 

 Professor of Botany at Padua. 

 — N. 



after Tydeus, a son of OEiieus, 

 King of Calydon. — N. 



from tylos, a swelling, and phoreo, 

 to bear ; alluding to the ven- 

 tricose pollen-masses (D) prob- 

 ably alludes to the coronal 

 lobes. — N. 



from typhos, a marsh ; a habitat 

 name (D), the old Greek name 

 used by Theophrastus. — N. 

 Bulrush. 

 . from TYPHON, a mythological 

 giant. — N. 



Ulmus, (Tourn.) L. . . Urti. 

 Uniola, L. . . Gram. 



1735 . . the old Latin name used by 



Virgil.— N. * 

 1737.. from unus, one; the glumes are 



united. — N. Spike Grass. 



* This is an adjective and not a substantive. S33 the note on this point in 

 Cooke, Bombay Flora, II, SH. 



