AND RAMBOOTAN, AS FRUIT TREES. 
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ill small terminal panicles, white, with a dash of reddish pink. Sepals unequal. 
Stamens eight, monadelphous at the base. Ovary surrounded by eight glands. 
It is a native of the Moluccas, and in the Botanical Garden at Calcutta it 
flowers during the rainy season, that is, from June to October, and ripens its fruit 
in the hot season, from March to June. 
DESCRIPTION OF 
a Branch of Euphoria Litchi, to show the pinnated 
leaves, and spreading panicle of inflorescence. 
b A detached flower, exhibiting the five segments of 
the calyx. 
c A detached fruit, one-fourth of the natural size. 
d A fruit with the outer reticulated skin broken to 
show the transparent pulp. 
THE WOOD-CUT. 
e Branch of Euphoria Longana, showing tlie panicle 
of inflorescence. 
/ detached flower. 
g Fruit, one-fourth the natural size. 
h Fruit cut open to show the stone in the centre. 
Euphoria infoemis— “ De Candolle’s Prodromus,” (i. 612.) The Nepheliiim 
informe of “ Don’s Syst.,” (i. 670). It forms a tree about twenty feet high. Leaves 
pinnated ; leaflets four to six pairs. Flowers produced in small terminal panicles. 
Berries usually twin, irregular, tubercular. It is a native of Cochin-China, where it 
grows in woods. The fruit is much eaten and esteemed, but it contains more acid 
than any of the preceding. The wood is also used for various purposes, being 
durable, hard, heavy, and of a reddish-brown colour. 
Euphoria ptnnata. — Pinnate-leaved Euphoria. The Nephelium pinnatum of 
