206 r FIRST BOOK. 
Page. Par. 
124, 2. a valley; low la.nd between hills. 
„ „ shaded; sheltered from the heat and light of the sun, 
124, 3. in full bearing; yielding full crops. 
125, 5. injured; broken or damaged. 
128, 9. wrapped; covered, rolled up in. 
129, 1. good flavour; pleasant to the taste. 
129, 5. budding or grafting; fixing a bud or a shoot into the 
wood of a tree in such a way that it will grow there. 
130, 9. kerosene; a mineral oil got from petroleum. 
132, 4. suckers ; branches or roots starting from beneath the 
surface. 
138, 3. delicious; extremely agreeable to the taste. 
138, 4. preserved ; prevented from sprouting. Fruits are pre- 
served in sugar, or in air-tight tins. 
140, 2. a mass of fibres; a number of threads matted together. 
140, 4. thatching; roofing with anything like straw or reeds to 
protect from the weather. 
142, 1. a cargo; a ship-load. 
144, 2. properly tended; attended to in the right way. 
144, 8. a cement; something that will cause two substances to 
stick together. 
146, 4. grain; the markings in wood — caused by the way it grows. 
» 5? gun-stocks; the wooden support to which the barrel and 
back of a gun or rifle is fixed. 
146, 5. native fruits; fruits of trees that have not been introduced 
from other countries. 
147, 3. a shoot-bud; a bud from which a shoot will grow. 
151, 1. neighbouring parish; the next or nearest parish. 
153, 6. glossy; shiny. i 
„ ,, spicy flavour; tasting like spice. 
153, 8. barbecues; an open floor on which coffee beans, &c., may 
be spread out to dry. 
155, 6. the ** New World "; America and the West Indies. 
156, 2. the remains of plants; all that is left of them in their 
decay. 
156, 3. capsule; a seed-vessel containing one or more cells, and 
opening when ripe by the separation of its valves. 
159, 1. speckled; marked with small spots. 
161, 5. collected; gathered up. 
161, 8. a drug; something used in preparing medicine. 
