TABLE VII. 



521 



Germen, a sprout or bud, the base of the pistillum, the rudiment 



of the fruit yet in embryo. 

 Gibbum Folium, bunching-out, or gouty. 

 Glaber, smooth, having an even surface. 

 Gladiata Siliqua, a sword-shaped pod. 

 Glandule, a gland, or secretory vessel. 



Glandulifera Scabrities, a kind of bristly roughness on the sur- 

 face of some plants, on which there are minute glands at 

 the extremity of each bristle. 



Glareosis Locis, gravelly places, where plants delight in gravel, 



Glaucophyllus, a blueish or azure-coloured leaf. 



Globosa Radix, a round root. 



Globularis ScaBritles, a species of glandular roughness, scarce 



visible to the naked eye, the small grains of which are 



exactly globular. 

 Glochoides, the small points of the pubes of plants. Linnceus 



applies this term only to the Hami TriglochoIds, with 



three hooked points. 

 Glomerata Spica, flowers crowded together in a globular form. 

 Gluma, a husk or chaff, a species of calyx peculiar to corn and 



grasses. 



Glutinositas, like glue or paste. 



Gramina, grasses, one of the seven families of the vegetable king* 

 dom. 



Gran ul at a Radix, roots consisting of many little knobs, like 

 seeds of grain, attached to one another by small strings, 

 as in Saxifraga Granulata. 



Gymnosperma, naked seeded, the first order of the class Didyna- 

 mia. 



Gynandria, when the male and female parts are joined together; 

 the twentieth class in the Linncean System. 



H 



Habitualis Character, the character or description of a plant, 

 taken from its habit, which consists in the Placentatio, Ra- 

 dicatio, Ramiticatio, Foliatio, Stipulatio, Pubescentia, 

 Inflorescentia, 



