210 GLOSSARY. 



Cldthrate ; latticed ; same as cancdlate. 



Cldvate : club-shaped ; slender below and thickened upwards. 



Claw : the narrow or stalk-like base of some petals, as of Pinks ; p. 102, fig. 200. 



Climbing : rising by clinging to other objects ; p. 37. 



Club-shaped ; see clavate. 



Clustered: leaves, flowers, &c. aggregated or collected into a bunch 



Clypeate : buckler-shaped. 



Coddunate : same as connate ; i. e. united. 



Coale'scent : growing together. 



Codrctate : contracted or brought close together. 



Coated Bulbs, p. 46. 



Cobwebby : same as arachnoid ; bearing hairs like cobwebs or gossamer. 



Coccus (plural cocci) : anciently a beny ; now mostly used to denote the carpels 



of a dry fruit which are separable from each other, as of Euphorbia. 

 Cochledriform : spoon-shaped. 

 Cdchleate : coiled or shaped like a snail-shell. 



Ccelosp&nwus : applied to those fruits of UmbcUiferse which have the seed hol- 

 lowed on the inner face, by the cm-ving inwards of the top and bottom ; as in 



Coriander. ' 



Coherent, in Botany, is usually the same as connate; p. 104. 

 Collective fruits, p. 133. 



Collum or Collar : the neck or line of junction between the stem and the root. 

 Columbia : the axis to which the carpels of a compound pistil are often attached, 



as in Geranium (fig. 278), or which is left when a pod opens, as in Azalea 



and Rhododendron. 

 Column : the united stamens, as in Mallow, or the stamens and pistils united into 



one body, as in the Orchis family, fig. 226. 

 Columnar : shaped like a column or pillar. 



Coma: a tuft of any sort (literally, a head of hair) ; p. 135, fig. 317. 

 Cdmose : tufted ; bearing a tuft of hairs, as the seeds of Milkweed ; fig. 317. 

 Commissure : the line of junction of two cai-pels, as in the fruit of UmbelliferiB, 



such as'Parsnip, Caraway, &e. 

 Common : used as " general," in contiadistinction to '"' partial " ; e. g. " common 



involucre," p. 81. 

 Cdmplanate : flattened. 



Compound leaf, p. 64. Compound pistil, p. 118. Compound umbel, &c., p. 81. 

 Complete (flower), p. 89. 

 Complicate : folded upon itself. 

 Compressed: flattened on two opposite sides. 

 Conduplicate : folded upon itself lengthwise, as are the leaves of Magnolia in the 



bud, p. 76. 

 Cone: the fruit of the Pine famil/ ; p. 133, fig. 314. 

 Cdnfuent : blended together ; or Lhe same as coherent. 

 Confdrmed: similar to another thing it is associated with or compared to; oi 



closely fitted to it, as the skin to the kernel of a seed. 

 Congested, Congldmerate : crowded together. 

 Conjugate : coupled ; in single pairs. 

 Connate : united or grown together from the first. 



