TERMINOLOGY:  - 107 
6. One, two, three, four nutted, &c. (sono, bi; 
tri, tetrapyrena), which contains one, two, three or 
four nuts. Butif the hard shell of the nut grows 
to the kernel, it 1s called a pyrenous berry. 
In accurate description. we must attend to the 
figure of the nut, as well: as to its cells. The nut 
of the Drupa has sometimes two, three, or more cells, 
fig.171; 172, 173: 
§ 100: 
Phe perry, (dacqa), is a succulent fruit which 
contains several seeds, andi never bursts. It incloses 
-the seeds without any determinate. order; or it is 
divided by a thin membrane. into cells. ‘There are 
the following kinds: 
1. Succulent, (suceosa), which consists of a very 
soft, succulent substance, as in the gooseberry, Ribes 
grossularia, &c. | 
2. Corticated, (corticosa), which is covered with a 
hard rind, so that it cannot be bruised. It might bé 
taken for a capsule, but it never bursts, and is filled 
with a juicy substance in which the seeds lie, as in 
Garcinia Mangostana. 
3. Dry, (exsucca), that instead of a fleshy sub: 
stance, is covered with a coriaceous or coloured 
skin, as in the ivy, Hedera Aelix. 
4. One, two, three, many-seeded, (mono, bi, tri; 
polysperma), according to the number of seeds which 
the berry contains. / 
5. One, two, three, many-celled,. (uni, bi, tris 
multilocularis), according to the number of Cells inté 
which the berry is divided. | | 
2 6. Twos 
