FUL 
or the Counter- ee fee CountEr- fugue 
The Italians fay a or ight f buagy or paces 
meaning a fie ee of room e doors cof 
an{wer in a right line behind each oe if as hey a ioe pe 
1 feen at once, from one extreme to the o 
UHME, in Geo ography, a river of Ger ermany, which 
runs into the ae 2 miles S. of ae in tlie eleCto- 
rate of Saxon 
FUH-SA ‘AH, a town of see in the country of 
Tunis; riomiles W.S.W. of ‘lun 
FUHSE, a river of Germany, which runs into the 
Allier, near Zell. 
FUIRENA, in Botany, fo named by Rottboll in me- 
mory of George Fuiren, a Danifh botanift. Roettb. Gra 
: Suppl. Ll. Noe Gram. 
1 
and order, Triandria Monog eynid. Nat. Ord. Calamaria, 
Linn. Cypercidea, Ju 
n. Ch. 
Gen. Ch. Cal. Spik e round, imbricated on all fides, with 
wedge-fhaped, channelled, three-keeled {cales, each ti 
with a fhort ftraight awn. Co s thr é 
branous, inverfely heart-fhaped, flat, entire, with an in- 
Stam. Filaments three, es inferted 
into the receptacle within the bafe of each 
corolla; anthers linear, ereCi. Pifl. 63 fuperior, 
large, triangular ; ftyle thread-thaped ; ftigmas two, revolute. 
eric. none, except the a éoroil, Seed one, naked, 
rlanguler, deftitute o 
h. Spike eed, with abrupt awned feales. 
Seed folitary, 
ot 
a 
oO 
ea of three obcordate awned valves. 
triangular, beardlefs, 
umbellata. Rottb. Gram. 70. t.19. f.3. (F. pa- 
Pree Linn. Suppl. 105.) Native of Surinam. Stem 
two or three feet high, fimple, angular, ftriated. Leaves 
a Bey tone ; pues acute, glaucous; their fheaths 
wer-ftalks axillary and terminal, bearing feveral 
fellile ce a foft blueifh pike s, half an inch long. This 
; i is nd Lows, except in a dried 
ftate, to European botanifts. Its habied is that of a Cyperus 
or Scirpus, but the glaucous hue is remarkable 
. FU RT, in Bie graphy, a learned French eal 
‘who flourifhed . the latter end of the tenth and in the c 
surges of the eleventh centuries, was an Italian fs 
L He was a dif iple o 
oneal throne in ggg, unde 
From Rome he came. to France, aad delivered public lec- 
‘tures. Here. hi is {cholars were very numerous, who, im- 
bibing the inftructions of their maiter, diffufed his learning 
and various information over France and Germany, and the 
other northern ftates of Europe, fo that Fulbert is juftly 
regarded as one of the principal reftorers of learning and o 
ane felences 3 in that age. ome hiftorians affert that he 
h r of France, but others cantend that his 
the church of Chartres. 
sions onened. only to 
In 1007 he was appointed to ie vacant fee of -Chartres, 
-and governed the church with great prudence upwards of 
twenty years. In conjunction with this bifhopric he held 
-the treafurerfhip of St. Hilary at Poi¢tiers, but he expended 
‘the profits of the fituation.in rebuilding his cathedral church. 
Me op Us. 
FUL - 
le&ted pai publifhed in a feparate form at Paris in 16082 
they are alfo inferted in the 17th vol. of t e Bibliotheca 
Patrum. Fulbert was a friend to literature pe feience, but 
».and a ae zealot 
or 
TULCIMENT, in Natural Hiftory, is a term for the 
plant-like bodies, formed by zoopkytic animals, as habita- 
tions or fupports, and which, accor ding to their confiftence,. 
are denominated coral, coralline, or Jponge, &c. Thea a 
cation of this term to the {ci gene ditcrimination and arrange~ 
ment of organic foffils, or reiiquia of this kind, will be ford 
in Martin’s « Outlines of the Kno owledge of extraneous. 
Foffils,”” p. 88. 97. and 103. See RExiqura 
FULCRA, in Botany and Vegetable Phyft aloes, the Props,, 
or rather Appendages > of the herbage of m ants. We 
aad this latter term in Englith, becaufe though the word. 
ucrum Yaxeans a prop or fap upport, it is, i that feafe, not 
se plicable to more than one kind of the ae in queftion, 
the tendril. See Cirrus. 
Thefe appendages are of feven net 
fa. The Stipula er Stipu hefe are 
appendage to the pr Ke er leaves or a their footitalks, com 
off ag 
d. eee ae finple ‘Tpala crowns the 
infide of the theath of their leaf. This As = termed Lula 
y ae i it is areal fipula. 
: The Floral Leaf, This isa leafy pupae 
proper the flower or its flalk, various in form and dera- 
tion eee coloured, asin the Purple or Pusee 
Cl Salvia Her. mirnisin. 
"s ind. ‘horn. Proceeds from the wood itfe If, 
being a Angee of the a of a bud, and is touad. 
n Hippo rious. cated of Crataegus or 
ma is fable vin difa et by cultur 
Aculeus, A Prickle. Arifes from ce bark only, 
and is {tripped off with it, having no conneétion with the: 
“xamples are found in the eee Bramble, an& 
Corte The prickle does not difappear in eonfe-. 
i 
rg ee tree, 
‘quence of culture like the Spina. 
5. Cirrus. A. tendril or clafper, by Mares moft climbing: 
plants are fupported upon others. this the word prop. 
is therefore juftly applied. See Cirru 
6. Gla land, . or little aneae difcharging a 
fluid, as in the-vifcid clothing of the all x and ftalk of a. 
Rofe, efpecially the Mofs-role, and many fimilar ialhaneos 
The liquor difcharged is either refinous, and often aromatic, 
{weet and eer ke honey. 
7. Pilus. A includin 
or downy anne of plas 
an excretory dnét, 
each hair or br ite, a 
a 
the oS reugh, h 
airy 
This in i 
nettle contifts of 
y Canute, and Richard II. of England; by the dukes of > of - differing. therefore. 
Normandy and Aquitaine, and by other eminent princes. in fhape only from the glendula. Buti in the greater number- 
nd gre of his . He was author of many theo- cafe 2 airs are merely a protection againit cold, heat,, 
logical piae but the moft valuable extant is a collection. or animals. oe! are often hocked, sh branched, 
’ by himfelf and friends, to the number of 
134. He ree in the year 1028. All his works were col- 
metime ea, 
