ENGLISH PLANT NAMES. 
541 
Grass, Sword, add Some species of Carex seems intended in 
the following passage : ‘ Large ant-hills, producing sour, coarse, 
husky sedge, or sword-grass. Line. Agric. Surv. 
Grass, Tacker. See Tacker-grass. 
Grass, Timothy, add N.-W. Line. 
Grass, Totter, add Leic. (E. D. S. Gloss.) ; Siirr. 
Grass, Twine. See Twine Grass. 
Grass, Twitch. (1) add Leic. ; Line. 
Grass, Water, add (3) Holeus lanatus, L. See Water Grass. 
Green Ginger. Artemisia vidgaris, L. — Line. (Lincoln), 
Green-sauce, add, Lane. E. D. S. Gloss. ; also add (2) Oxalis 
Acetosella, L.—Dev. Friend. 
Green Weed. (1) add Suff. 
Gregories. Narcissus Pseudo-narcissus, L. — Dev. (Frittlestoke, near 
Torrington). ‘ The people of the village call these plants Gregories, a 
name that struck us on account of its coinciding with the appellation 
of the order to which the neighbouring monastery belonged’ (the 
Canons of St. Gregory). Maton, Obs. on Western Counties (1797), 
ii. 55. 
Ground Ash. (3) add Hants. E. D. S. Gloss. 
Ground Ivy. (1) add Glou. 
Grunsel. add Middx. ; Siirr. 
Guinea Plant, or Guinea Flower. Kerria japonica, DC. N. Line. 
(Bottesford). 
Gussets. Orchis mascula, L. — Dors. (Broad Windsor) . 
Gye or Guy. (2) add Suff. 
add (3) Papaver Bhoeas, L. — Suff 
(4) Lychnis Githago, Lam. Lane. ; Suff. 
(5) Corn-weeds, that is almost any weed in a cornfield. Suff. 
Science Gossip, 1882, p. 214. 
Hag. The haw or berry of the hawthorn. Hants. E. D. S. Gloss. 
Hag-berry, add Hants. E. D. S. Gloss. 
Haggils. Haws of the whitethorn. N. Hants. E. D. S. Gloss. 
Hagtaper. add The name is used by Ellis, New Experiments, 56. 
Hailweed. Caseuta Epithyniuin, L., and C. eiiropcea, L. — This is 
the name usually employed by Ellis (Modern Husbandman, vol. iv. 
pt. 1, p. 63), who, sometimes spells it Hale-weed, also calls the seed 
Hail-seed; Hellweed (which see) is also used by him, but less 
frequently. 
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