GLOSSARY AND INDEX. 207 



Gladiate, sword-shaped, as the leaves of Iris. 



Olandi, small cellular organs which secrete oily or aromatic or other products ; they 



are sometimes sunk in the leaves or rind, as in the Orange, Prickly Ash, &c. ; 



sometimes on the surface as small projections; sometimes raised on hairs or 



bristles {glandular hairs, <}c.), as in the Sweetbrier and Sundew. The name is 



also given to any small swellings, &c., whether they secrete anything or not; so 



that the word is loosely used. 

 Glandular, Glandulose, furnished with glands, or gland-like. 

 Glana {Gland), the acorn or mast of Oak and similar fruits. 

 Glareoae, growing in gravel. 

 Glauceecent, slightly glaucous, or bluish-gray. 

 Glaucota, covered with a bloom, viz. with a fine white powder of wax that rubs off, 



like that on a fresh plum, or a cabbage-leaf. 

 Glohoae, spherical in form, or nearly so. Globular, nearly globose. 

 Gloehidittte, or Glochideous, (bristles) barbed; tipped with barbs, or with a double 



hooked point. 

 Glomerate, closely aggregated into a dense cluster. 

 Glomerule, a dense head-like cluster, 77. 



Glossology, the department of botany in which technical terms are explained. 

 Glumaceous, glume-like, or glume-bearing. 

 Glume ; Glumes are the husks or floral coverings of Grasses, or, particularly, the 



outer husks or bracts of each spikelet. 

 Glumelles, the inner husks of Grasses. 

 Gonophore, a stipe below stamens, 113. 

 Gossypine, cottony, flocculent. 

 Gracilis, Latin for slender. 

 Grain, see Caryopsis, 121. 

 Gramineous, grass-like. 



Granular, composed of grains. Granule, a small grain. 

 Graveolent, heavy-scented. 

 Griseous, gray or bluish-gray. 

 Growth, 129. 



Grumous, or Gruniose, formed of coarse clustered grains. 

 Guttate, spotted, as if by drops of something colored. 

 Gymnos, Greek for naked, as 



Gymnoearpous, naked-fruited. Gymno^ermous, naked-seeded, 109. 

 Gymnospermous gynoecium, 109. 

 Gymno^ermee, or Gymnospermous Plants, 183. 

 Gynandrous, with stamens borne on, i. e. united with, the pistil, 99. 

 Gynacium, a name for the pistils of a flower taken altogether, 105. 

 Gynobase, a depressed receptacle or support of the pistil or carpels, 114. 

 Gynophore, a stalk raising a pistil above the stamens, 113. 

 Gynostegium, a sheath around pistils, of whatever nature. 

 Gynostemium, name of the column in Orchids, &c., consisting of style and stigma 



with stamens combined. 

 Gyrate, coiled or moving circularly. 

 Gyrose, strong!}' bent to and fro. 



Habit, the general aspect of a plant, or its mode of growth. 

 Habitat, the situation or country in which a plant grows in a wild state. 

 Hairs, hair-like growths on the surface of plants. 

 Hairy, beset with hairs, especially longish ones. 

 Halberd-shaped, see hastate, 53. 



Halved, when appearing as if one half of the body were cut away. 

 Hamate,,OT Hamose, hooked; tlie end of a slender body bent round. 

 Hamulose, bearing a small hook ; a diminutive of the last. 



Haplo-, in Greek compounds, single ; as Haplostemonous, having only one series o[ 

 stamens. 



