Calyphyomy 
Jorma, shape), shaped like uw 
shoe. 
cal’ceus (Lat. from calx), chalk- 
white; cale'iform (forma, shape), 
““powdery, like chalk or lime.” 
(Crozier); calciph’ilous (giAéw, I 
love), chalk-loving ;  calcif’ugal 
(fugo, I flee), shunning chalk, as 
heather ;  calciv’orous (voro, I 
devour), applied to Lichens which 
eat into their limestone matrix. 
Calda’rium (Lat. warm bath-room) in 
botanic gardens signifies an inter- 
mediate or warm greenhouse. 
Calenda’rium (Lat., an account-book) 
~ Flor’ae, an arrangement of plants 
according to their period of flower- 
ing. 
Calend’ulin, a mucilaginous substance 
from the marigold, Calendula 
officinalis, Linn. 
calica’lis = CALYCALIS 
calica’tus = OCALYCATUS 
calicina/ris, calicina’rius = CALYCIN- 
ARIS, etc. 
calic’ular, calicula’ris = CALYCULAR, etc. 
calic’ulate = CALYCULATE. 
ealicinianus = CALYCINIANUS. 
Caliol’ogy (xadla, a cabin; Adyos, dis- 
course), juvenescence ; thedynamics 
of the young cell (J. C. Arthur). 
Calix =CaLyx. 
calorit‘ropic (calor, heat; tporh, a 
turn), term proposed by Klercker 
for thermotropic; Calorit’ropism 
= THERMOTROPISM. 
eall’ose, callo’sus (callus, hard skin), 
(1) bearing callosities ; (2) hard and 
thick in texture; Call’ose, Mangin’s 
term for a presumed essential con- 
stituent of the cell-wall; Callos‘ity, 
a leathery or hard thickening of 
part of an organ ; callo’so-serra‘tus, 
when the serratures are callosities ; 
Call’us, (1) an abnormally thickened 
part, as the base of a cutting ; (2) 
a special deposit on sieve-plates; 
(3) a synonym of VerRuca ; (4) the 
hymenium of certain Fungi; (5) 
an extension of the flowering glume 
below its point of insertion, and 
grown to the axis or rhachilla of 
the spikelet. 
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Calopo’dium +t (adds, fair, ots, 
modds, foot), Rumph’s term for 
SPATHE. 
Cal’pa («ddn, an urn), Necker’s term 
for the capsule of Fontinalia. 
cal’vous, ca/’vus (Lat., bald), naked, 
as an achene without pappus. 
Calyb’io (xadvPiov, a cottage), Mirbel’s 
name for a hard, one-celled, in- 
ferior, dry fruit, such as the acorn, 
or hazel-nut; Calyb‘ium { is a 
synonym. 
calycanth’emous (xdAvé, a cup; dvAos, 
a flower), (1) having the sepals con- 
verted wholly or partially into 
petals; (2) the corolla and stamens 
inserted in the calyx; Calycan- 
th’emy, « montrosity of the calyx 
imitating an exterior corolla; 
calyca'lis, of or belonging to the 
calyx; Cal’ycle, Calyc’ula, a whorl 
of bracts exterior to the true calyx ; 
calyca‘tus (Lat.), furnished with a 
calyx; Calyc’ia, a stipitate and 
boat-shaped apothecium ; Calyci- 
flor’ae ( flos, floris, a flower), plants 
having their petals and stamens 
aduate to the calyx; adj., calyci- 
flor’al, calyciflor’ous; calyc’iform, 
(forma, shape), cup-shaped, applied 
to an indusium ; Cal’ycin, a bitter, 
yellow, crystallizable substance 
from Caliciwm chrysocephalum, Ach., 
and other Lichens; calycina’lis 
(Lat.), cal’ycine, calyci’nus, (1) 
belonging to the calyx ; (2) of the 
nature of a calyx; (3) denoting a 
calyx of unusual size ; calycinia‘nus 
}, calycina’ris {, polyphylly of the 
calyx; calycina’‘rius, formed from 
the calyx ; Cal’ycle, Calyc’ulus, the 
epicalyx, or involucre simulating 
an additional calyx, a whorl of 
bracts outside the true calyx; 
cal'ycoid, calycoid’eus (eldos, re- 
semblance), resembling a calyx ; 
Calycoste’mon (or7uwy, a filament), 
a stamen seated on the calyx; 
calye’ulate, calycula'tus, bearing 
bracts which imitate an external 
calyx; Calyphy’omy (dvoua, I 
spring from), adhesion of the sepals 
to the petals. 
