Mingent ; a 2-lipped -widely open corolla. 



Mootstoch ; a thick short rnizome or tuber. 



Rosette ; a collection of leaves growing close together, like the 



petals, of a double rose. 

 Mosulate ; arranged in a rosette. 

 Eotate; a monopetalous corolla with a short tube and very 



spi-eading limb. 

 Rudimentary ; imperfectly developed. 



Hugose ; covered with a net of lines enclosing convex spaces. 

 Mugulose ; finely rugose. 

 Muneinate ; where the lobes of leaves are directed towards the 



base. 

 Runner ; a prostrate shoot rooting at its end ; a stole. 



Sagittate ; like the barbed head of an arrow, the auricles or lobes 



pointing backwards. 

 Salvershaped ; a corolla with a long slender tube and flat limb. 

 Scabrous ; rough like a blacksmith s hand. 

 Scales ; minute rudimentary leaves ; very small flat semidetached 



parts of the cuticle. 

 Scape ; a leafless radical peduncle. 

 Scarious ; very thin, dry, and semitransparent. 

 Scorpioid; said of the branches of a cyme cmTed in a circinate 



manner, and the flowers produced only on the upper side. 

 Secund ; all turned towards one side. 

 Seed; the ovule arrived at maturity. 

 Seedstalk ; the stalk connecting the hilum of a seed with the 



Elacenta. 

 : ; the divisions of the calyx. 

 Septiddal ; when a fruit splits through the middle of the septa 



or partitions. 

 Septifragal ; when a fruit splits by the separation of the backs 



of the carpels from the septa. 

 Septum ; the division of an ovary formed by the inflexed edges 



of the carpels. 

 Serrate ; toothed like a saw. 

 Serratures ; teeth like those of a saw. 

 Serrulate ; with very small sawlike teeth. 

 Sessile ; without a stalk. 

 Seta; a bristle; a bristle tipped with a gland ; a slender straight 



prickle. 

 Setaceous ; like a bristle. 



Setose ; bearing bristles or setse usually ending in glands. 

 Sheath ; the lower part of a leaf or its petiole, which forms a 



vertical sheath surrounding the stem. It is sometimes 



found alone. 

 Silicle; a silique not four times as long as broad. 



