identification problem but does indicate that /. crenata var. thomsonii 

 or /. thomsonii is in cultivation. This taxon also occurs in the wild in 

 Sikkim and Nepal, 3,000-3,300 m elev. = /. thomsonii Hooker f. 



TINGLE-ONE (S.-y. Hu, Nat'l Hort. Mag. 36(1):64. 1957 and idem, 

 Amer. Hort. Mag. 49(4):2. 1970) - low growing; lvs. oblong-elliptic, 

 small, occasionally rounded at tip, sometimes convex; probably a 

 hybrid off. microphylla and f. convexa; female; orig. Tingle Nurs., 

 Pittsville, Maryland. = T-ONE, Tl. 



TINY (Orlando Pride, Butler, Pennsylvania, advert, in Amer. Nurseryman 

 142(1 ):86. 1975) - the lowest growing; lvs. large, convex, very dark 

 green, shiny; female; very hardy in Butler, Pennsylvania. Illegitimate, 

 since the name J. opaca TINY has priority. = PRIDE'S TINY, TINY 

 TIM. 



TINY TIM (Orlando Pride, Butler, Pennsylvania, cat. p. 4. 1963-64, 

 without descr.) - very hardy. O. Pride, Proc. Holly Symposium, Ann. 

 Rpt. Missouri State Nurs. Assoc, p. 1 1. 1963 - as hardy as STOKES; 

 orig. about 1953 as sdlg. of STOKES that was given to O. Pride by 

 Warren Stokes, Butler, Pennsylvania; sel., named, and introd. by O. 

 Pride. Very compact and spreading, similar to STOKES in habit but 

 much more luster to lvs. At one time in conversation, O. Pride 

 ultimately preferred the name TINY to TINY TIM. However, he was 

 not aware, when he named this cultivar of/, crenata, of the priority of 

 /. opaca TINY and /. opaca TINY TIM, which made his /. crenata 

 TINY and TINY TIM illegitimate. = PRIDE'S TINY, TINY. 



T-ONE (Tingle Nurs., Pittsville, Maryland, cat. p. 16. fall 1958-sp. 1959) 

 - low, compact, spreading. Female. The name T-ONE is accepted over 

 the earlier name Tl because T-ONE has been used consistently by the 

 originator since 1958. = Tl, TINGLE-ONE. 



TOPIARY (Cannon Plants, Greenwood, Delaware, cat. sp. 1973) - dense, 

 stiff, unusual; said to grow in any direction in which a new bud is 

 pointed, even straight down; suitable for topiary work; female. Twiggy, 

 dwarf, branching at all angles; orig. after 1954 from a cross made by 

 N. Cannon; sel., named, and introd. by Cannon. 



f. tricocca (Makino) Hara (H. Hara, Enumeratio Spermatophytarum 

 Japonicarum Pt. 3 p. 71. 1954, without descr.) - changed rank from var. 

 tricocca Makino (T. Makino, Zissai-Engei 27:1096. 1941.) to bot. 

 forma. S.-y. Hu, Nat'l Hort. Mag. 36(1):49. 1957 - a forma with fruit 

 born in threes; native Japan; probably not introd. yet. = TRICOCCA, 

 var. tricocca Makino. 



TRICOCCA (J. Sugimoto, New Keys to Woody Pits. Jap., p. 277. 1972) - 

 flowers in threes. Sugimoto does not indicate whether this cultivar is 

 based on var. tricocca Makino. If TRICOCCA was intended as a 

 cultivar name, it is illegitimate, since it is in Latin form. = f. tricocca 

 (Makino) Hara, var. tricocca Makino. 



TWIGGY (G. Eisenbeiss and T. Dudley, Holly Soc. Amer. Let. 70:1. 



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