46 
INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 
Silky, sericece. With long, soft, brilliant hairs, lying 
flat. Absinthium vulgare. 
Woolly, lanaixe. With long hair, lying flat, and more 
or less clotted, like coarse cloth. 
Clothlike, nappy, tomenlosce. With close hairs, more or 
less matted, like fine cloth. 
Hispid, fiispidce , hispidosce. With rough hair. 
Hispidulous, hispidulee. With hair rather rough. 
Hirsute, hirsutce , hirtuosce , hirtce. With rough, pricking 
hair. Borago officinalis. 
Strigose, strigosce. With stiffj long hair, swelled at 
their root. 
Echinate, echinatce , spinellosce. With points, spinellce, 
stronger, thicker, and harder than hairs. Dipsacus fullo- 
num, D. laciniatus. 
Prickly, aculeate e. With woody points adhering only to 
the bark, and easily broke off. Rosa. 
Thorny, spinosce. With points growing out of the wood 
of the plant. Ulex Europseus, Prunus spinosa. 
14. Stations. 
Land, Plantoe terrestres, terranece . 
Sand, arenarice , sabidosce. Psamma arenaria, Ulex. 
Rock, saxatiles , rupeslres 9 petrosce. Sedum. 
Gravel, glareosce. Aira fiexuosa. 
Wall, ruder ales. On walls and ruins. Chenopodium 
murale, Urtica dioica, Parietaria officinalis. 
Cavern, cauernarice. In caves and mines. Byssus, 
Boletus. 
Clay, argillosce . 
Chalk, cretacece. Hippocrepis comosa, Caucalis dau- 
coides, orchideas. 
Granitic, graniticae. 
Slate, schistosce. 
Limestone, calcarece. 
Garden, hortenses. Lamium amplexicaule, Galium unci* 
natum, Alsine media. These are usually called Weeds. 
Vineyard, vineales. Aristolochia infesta. 
Field, agrestes . Growing in arable land. Chrysanthe- 
mum segetum, Githago segetum. 
Fallow land, arvenses . Growing in fallowed fields. Me- 
lampyrum arvense, Aphanes arvensis, Acetosa repens. 
Meadow', pratenses. Growing in grass-land. Trifolium 
pratense, Ranunculus acris. 
