224 GLOSSARY AND INDEX. 



Thyrse or Thyrsus, a compact and pvTamidal panicle of cymes or cymules, 79. 



Tomentose, clothed with matted woolly hairs (tomentum). 



Tongue-shaped, long and flat, but tbickish and blunt. 



Toothed, furnished with teeth or short projections of any sort on the margin; used 

 especially when these are sharp, like saw-teeth, and do not point forwards, 55. 



Tqp-ihaped, shaped like a top, or a cone with apex downwards. 



Torose, Torulose, knobby; where a cylindrical bodj- is swollen at intervals, 



Toms, the receptacle of the flower, 81, 112. 



Trachea, a spiral duct. 



Trachys, Greek for rough; used in compounds, as, Trachyspermous, rough-seeded. 



TraTisverse, across, standing right and left instead of. fore and aft. 



3"»-!- (in composition), three; as, 



Triadelphous, stamens united by their filaments into three bimdles, 99. 



Triandrous, where the flower has three stamens, 112. 



Ti-ibe, 178. 



Trichome, of the nature of hair or pubescence. 



Trichotovious, three-forked. Tncoccous, of three cocci or roundish carpels. 



Tricolor, having three colors. Tricostate, having three ribs. 



Triciispidate, three-pointed. Tridentate, three-toothed. 



Triennial, lasting for three years. 



Trifarious, in three vertical rows ; looking three ways. 



Trijid, three-cleft, 56. 



Trifoliate, three-leaved. Trifoliolate, of three leaflets. 



Trifwrcate, three-forked. Trigonous, three-angled, or triangular. 



Trigynous, with three pistils or styles, 110. Tiijugate, in three pairs {jugi), 



Trilobed or Trilobate, three-lobed, 55. 



Trilocular, three-celled, as the pistils or pods in fig. 328-330. 



Trimerous, with its parts in threes. THmmphism, 117. Trimorphic or Trimor- 

 phous, iu three forms. 



Trinervate, three-nerved, or with three slender ribs. 



TrvBctous, where there are three sorts of flowers on the same or different individ- 

 uals, as in Red Maple. A form of Polygamous. 



Tripartible, separable into three pieces. Tripartite, three-parted, 55. 



Tripetalous, having three petals. 



Triphyllous, three-leaved; composed of three pieces. 



Tripinnate, thrice pinnate, 59. Tripinnatifid, thrice pinnatelr cleft, 57. 



Triple-ribbed, Triple^erved, &c., where a midrib branches into three, near the base 

 of the leaf. 



Triquetrous, sharply three-angled; and especially with the sides concave, like a 

 bayonet. 



Triserial, or Triseriate, in three rows, under each other. 



Tristichous, in three longitudinal or perpendicular ranks. 



Tristigmatic, or Tristigmatose, having three stigmas. 



Trisulcate, three-grooved. 



Tritemaie, three times ternate, 59. 



Trivial Name, the specific name. 



Trochlear, pulley-shaped. 



Trumpet-shaped, tubular; enlarged at or towards the summit 



Truncate, as if cut off at the top. 



Trunk, the main stem or general body of a stem or tree. 



Tube (of corolla, &c.), 89. 



Tuber, a thickened portion of a subterranean stem or branch, provided with eyes 

 (buds) on the sides, 44. 



Tubercle, a small excrescence. 



Tubercled, or Tuberculate, bearing excrescences or pimples. 



Tubmform, trumpet-shaped. 



Tuberous, resembling a tuber. Tuberiferous, bearing tubers. 



Tubular, hollow and of an elongated form; hollowed like a pipe, 91. 



