454 
GLOSSOLOGY. 
BOOK III. 
86. t Vase-shaped (f vascularis) ; formed like a flower-pot ; that 
is to say, resembling an inverted truncate cone. 
87. t Tapeworm-shaped tcenianus) \ long, cylindrical, con- 
tracted in various places, in the manner of the tapeworm. 
88. f Sausage-shaped (^\ botuliformis) \ long, cylindrical, hollow, 
curved inwards at each end ; as the corolla of some Ericas. 
89. f Umbrella-shaped (-j- umhraculiformis) ; resembling an ex- 
panded umbrella ; that is to say, hemispherical and convex, 
with rays, or plaits, proceeding from a common centre ; as the 
stigma of Poppy. 
90. f Meniscoid (-j' meniscoideus) ; thin, concavo-convex, and he- 
mispherical, resembling a watch-glass. 
91. Mushroom-headed (^fimgiformis, fungilliformis); cylindrical, 
having a rounded, convex, overhanging extremity ; as the 
embryo of some monocotyledonous plants, as Musa. 
92. f Nave-shaped modioliforjnis) \ hollow, round, depressed, 
with a very narrow orifice ; as the ripe fruit of Gaultheria. 
93. Hooded {cucullatus) ; a plane body, the apex or sides of which 
are curved inwards, so as to resemble the point of a slipper, or 
a hood ; as the leaves of Pelargonium cucullatum, the spatha 
of Arum, the labellum of Pharus. 
94. f Saddle-shaped (^sdlceformis) ; oblong, with the sides hanging 
down, like the laps of a saddle ; as the labellum of Cattleya 
Loddigesii. 
95. Turgid (turgidus) ; slightly swelling. 
96. Bladdery {injiatus) ; thin, membranous, slightly transparent, 
swelling equally, as if inflated with air ; as the calyx of Cu- 
cubalus. 
