258 
BRITISH NAMES. 
Coriander 
Cork tree 
Corn-bind ; or devil’s-gut 
Corn, Guinea ; or Indian millet 
Corn, Indian ; or maze 
Corn flag ; or gladiole, common 
Corn marigold; or guilis 
Corn poppy 
Com salad ; or lamb’s lettuce 
Cornel; or dog berry 
Cornelian cherry 
Costmary; or Valecost*' 
Coronopus ; or swine’s cress 
Cotton plant,f common Levant 
Cotton tree 
Cotton, lavender, common 
Cotton tree, silk 
Cotton grass, common 
Cotton weed ; or cudweed 
Courbaril; or locust tree 
Cow-grass ; or English red clover Trifolium alpestre 
Cow-quakes; or quake grass Briza 
Cow-itch; or cow age Dolichos pruritus 
Cowslip (a variety) Primula veris (officinalis) 
Cowslip, American ; or meadia Dodecatheon meadia 
Cowslip; or sage of Jerusalem; 1 „ 7 . ' & . 7 . 
or spotted lungwort jPulmonana officinalis 
Cow-weed ; or wild chervil Chterophyllum sylvestre 
Crab tree ; or apple tree Pyrus malus 
Crab, small Siberian Pyrus malus baccata 
Coriandrum sativum 
{ Quercus suber 
Spondias mombin 
Convolvulus arvemis 
Hoicks sorghum 
Zea mays 
Gladiolus communis 
Chrysanthemum segetum 
Papaver rhoeas 
Valeriana locusta 
Cornus sanguinea 
Cornus mascula 
Tanacetum balsamita 
Cochlearia coronopus 
Gossypium herbaceum 
Gossypium arboreum 
Santolina chamoe cyparissus 
Bombax gossypinum 
Eriophorum polystachion 
Gnaphalium margarit actum 
Hymenda courbaril 
* Costmary, formerly called costus maria;, receives its name from its aromatie 
quality, similar to the costus arabicus ; it is also sometimes called alecost, from the 
pleasant flavour it gives to that liquor by infusion;—and it is said that the essential 
oil is of great use in France, to cure all wounds and bruises. 
+ Beside the herbaceous and arboreous cotton (which see under gossypiumj, there 
is also an animal cotton, which is spun by a worm (in the same manner as silk¬ 
worms) known in America by the name of manioc, or indigo worm, and encloses 
itself in a white cotton ball; which is said to have many advantages over the 
vegetable cotton, Edin, Rev. vol. iii. p. 89 , printed in 1806. 
