GLOSSAKT OF TERM3. 



ixi 





PAR. 





PAtt. 





PAR. 



Trichotomous • 



. 34 



Umbilicate . • 



173 



Vegetable Chemistry . 



8 



Trifid . 



. 43 



Umbonate . 



173 



Vegetable Homology 





Trifoliolate . 



. 41 



Uncinate = hooked. 





or Metamorphosis . 



88 



Trigonous . 



. 54 



Undershrubs 



12 







Tripinnate . * 



. 43 



Undulate 



39 



Vegetable Physiology 8,207 



Triplinerved 



. 40 



Unequally pinnate 



43 



Veins, veinlets, venation 40 



Triquetrous * 



. 54 



Unguiculate 



107 



Vernation . 



57 



Tristichous . , 



. 32 



Unguis (claw) . 



107 



Versatile anther . 



114 



Truncate . • 



. 47 



Uni- (1 in composition) 44 



Verticil, verticillate 



32 



Trunk . • • 



. 12 



Unilateral (one-sided) 





Vessels . 



188 



Tube . 



101, 104 



racemes . • 



74 



Virgate= twiggy . 



28 



Tuber, tuberous 20 



, 25, 204 



Unilocular . • 



126 



Viscid, viscous « 



173 



Tuberculate . 



. 173 



Unisexual . 



, 86 



Vitta, vittge 



175 



Tubular • • 



. 104 



Unsymmetrical . 



. 94 



Viviparous . • 



17 



Tufted . 



. 28 



Upper . 



. 91 



Voluble 



29 



Tunicated bulb . 



. 27 



Urceolate . 



104 







Turbinate =top-shaped 54 



Utricle . 



. 158 



Wart, warted 



. 173 



Twiner . 



. 29 







Wavy . 



39 



Twisted . • 



. 102 



Valvate • • 



102 



Whorl, whorled . 



32 



Type, typical • 



.181 



Valves . 



. 158 



Wing, winged . 37 



, 155 







Variety 



. 178 



Wood . 



. 198 



Umbel, umbellate, 



um- 



Vascular tissue . 



. 188 



Woody tissue 



. 188 



bellule • « 



33,74 



Vegetable Anatomy * 



1,186 



Wool, woolly • 



. 173 



III. ARRANGEMENT OF THE TEXT, AND ABBREVIATIONS 

 USED IN THE PRESENT WORK. 



In the following pages the name of each Family or Order (for the two 

 words may be indiscriminately used) is given in Latin and in English. 

 The English name is always in two words, exclusive of the particle. 

 Where the first word is not the name of a genus also, it may be used 

 alone to designate the family by putting it in the plural, as Crucifers 

 for the Crucifer family, Waterlilies for the Waterlily family. Where, how- 

 ever, it is also the name of a genus, and it is wished to designate the 

 family by a single word, in order to avoid confusion, either the Latin 

 name must be taken, or it must be Anglicised by some of the modes 

 which have been proposed, such as substituting the terminations ids 

 for idem, and anths or ads for acece, as : Orchids for Orchidacece, Ranun- 

 culanths or Ranwnculads for Ranunculacecs. 



After the name of the family, the first paragraph, in large type, is the 

 character of the family ; the second, in ordinary type, contains remarks 

 on its geographical distribution and affinities. 



This is followed, in small type, by the analytical key of the British 

 genera belonging to the Order, as above explained, (p. Hi., par. 245) ; 

 and short memoranda are occasionally subjoined on commonly culti- 

 vated plants belonging to exotic genera. 



Each genus commences with the name, in Latin on the left, in English 

 on the right. Where there is no English name suitable for the genus, 

 the Latin one is repeated, as it must in that case be used as English. 



