64 Laws of Botanical Nomenclature. 
On the manner of designating the nature and subordination of ie : 
groups that constitute the Vegetable Kingdom. 1] 
Art. 8. Every individual plant belongs to a species ( (pei | 
every species to a genus (genus), every genus to an order (ordi, 
_familia), every order to a cohort cohors), every bee tou 
class (classis), every class to a division (divisio). | 
Art. many species we distinguish likewise varieties aul 
variations, and in some cultivated species, modifications rel 
more numerous ; in many genera sections, in many 0 
tribes. 
ue 10. Finally, if circumstances require us to cist 
ter number of intermediate groups, it is easy, by puttin 
Sosy syllable sub before the name of e group, to form sib 
divisions of that group ; in this manner suborder (subord) i 
designates a group between an order and a tribe, subtribe (sth i 
tribus), a group between a tribe and a genus, etc. The ensel 
ble of subordinate groups may thus be carried, for uncultivatel 
a plants only, to twenty degrees, in the ila 
0! 
re 
ensemlr 
a 
is 
Regnum vegetabile, 
Divisio, . 
nieve 
® frtliation of one Seaton by another givé 
: ridus) ; that of a jaediBeation or subdi-_ 
: mother rg spe of the same s 
mistus, mule of florists) 
sve arTangement of species in a genus or in a su 
