GLOSSARY AND INDEX. 811 



Legume, a simpie pod which dehisces in two pieces, like that of the Pea. 122 



Leguminous, belonging to legumes, or to the Leguminous Family. 



Lenticular, lens-shaped ; i. e. flattish and convex on both sides 



Lappaceous, bur-like. 



Lasio, Greek for woolly or hairy, as Latinnihus, woolly-flowered. 



Lateritious, brick-colored. 



Laticiferout, containing latex, 138. 



Latus, Latin for broad, as Latif alius, broad-leaved. 



Leaf-tear, Leafstalk, petiole. 



Lenticels, lenticular dots on young bark. 



Lentiginose, as if freckled. 



Lepal, a made-up word for a staminode. 



Lepis, Greek for a scale, whence Lepidote, leprous; covered with scurfy scales. 



Leptos, Greek for slender; so Leptophyllous, slender-leaved. 



Leuleos, Greek for white; whence Leucanthous, white-flowered, &c 



Liber, the inner bark of Exogenous stems, 140. 



Lid, see operculum. 



Ligneous, or Lignose, woody in texture. 



Ligulate, furnished with a ligule, 93. 



Ligule, Ligula, the strap-shaped corolla in many Composite, 93; the membranous 

 appendage at the summit of the leaf-sheaths of most Grasses, 67. 



Limb, the border of a corolla, &c, 89. 



Limbate, bordered (Latin, Limbus, a border). 



Line, the twelfth of an inch; or French lines, the tenth. 



Linear, narrow and flat, the margins parallel, 52. 



Lineate, marked with parallel lines. Lineolate, marked with minute lines. 



Lingulate, Linguiform,. tongue-shaped. 



Lip, the principal lobes of a bilabiate corolla or calyx, 99. 



Litoral or Littoral, belonging to the shore. 



Livid, pale lead-colored. 



Lobe, any projection or division (especially a rounded one) of a leaf, &c. 



Lobed or Lobate, cut into lobes, 55, 66; Lobulate, into small lobes. 



Locellate, having Locelli, i. o. compartments in a cell: thus an anther-cell is ofter 

 bilocellate. 



Loculament, same as loculus. 



Locular, relating to the cell or compartment {Loculus) of an ovary, &c. 



Loculicidal (dehiscence), splitting down through the back of each cell, 123. 



Locusta, a name for the spikelet of Grasses. 



Lodicule, one of the scales answering to perianth-leaves in Grass-flowers. 



Lament, a pod which separates transversely into joints, 122. 



Lomentaceous, pertaining to or resembling a loment. 



Lorate, thong-shaped. 



Lunate, crescent-shaped. Lumdate, diminutive of .unate. 



Lupuiine, like hops. 



Lusus, Latin for a sport or abnormal variation. 



Luteolus, yellowish ; diminutive of 



Luteus, Latin for yellow. Lutescent, verging to yellow. 



Lyrate, lyre-shaped ; a pinnatifid leaf of an obovate or spatulate outline, the end- 

 lobe large and roundish, and the lower lobes small, as in fig. 149. 



Macros, Greek for long, sometimes also used for large ; thus Macrophyllout, long 



or large-leaved, &c. 

 Macrotpore, the large kind of spore, when there are two kinds, 160, 161. 

 Maculate, Bpotted or blotched. 



Male (flowers or plants), having stamens but no pistil. 

 Mammose, breast-shaped. 

 Marcescent, withering without falling ofl. 

 Marginal, belonging to margin. 



