! 
BRITISH NAMES. 
805 
Satyrion ; or dog-stones Orchis 
Sauce alone; or'Jack by'the hedge Erysimum aliiaria 
Savin—see Sabin 
Sanders, white or yellow 
Sanders, red 
Savory, contmori 
Saw-wort 
Saxifrage . 
Saxifrage, white or granulated 
Saxifrage, Burnet 
Saxifrage, golden 
Saxifrage, meadow 
{ 
Santalum album f 
Sirium my rt folium f 
Pterocarpus santalinus 
Satureja hortensis 
Serratula 
Sax if ruga* 
Saxfraga gramdata 
Pimpindla saxfraga 
Chrys ospletdum 
SeSeli sa’xfmgum 
Scabiosa arvemis 
> Jasione montana 
Scabious, common 
Scabious, hairy sheep’s; or Tam¬ 
pions with scabious heads 
Scallion; cibouls; or Welsh onion J Ilium cepa (camhrica) 
Scammony of Montpelier Cynanchumamtum 
Sciatica cress ; or base mithri-' 
date mustard 
Seordiunl 
Scorpion grass,; or caterpillars 
Scorpion grass, mouse-ear 
Scorpion’s thorn ; or gorse 
Screw tree 
Scull or skull cap 
Scurvy grass,; or spoon-wort 
Sea beard 
Sea-fans (Zoophytesf) 
Iberis 
Teucrium scdrdium 
Scorpiurus vet micida fa 
Myqsotis scorpioidcs 
XJlex europacus 
Helicteres isora 
Scutellaria 
Cochlea ria, officina Us , 
Conferva rupestris. 
* Saxifraga (from saxum a stone, and frango to break), a name given to several 
plants, which are opposed to have the virtue of bteajiing or dissolving , the stprie 
in the human body. 
,f Zoophytes mean animal plants; as corallines , sea-fans, :spmge,&e. 'Which 
are generally classed among animals.—As to the andrbsaee (agarichs andrdsaceus), 
its place is not yet determined in natural history; Vitaliano Donati calls it a plant; 
Linnaeus says it is a zoophyte, and gives it\he name of tabularia dleta&ulum; ac¬ 
cording to the Abbe Alberto Fortis, it is one of the subaqueous productions of the 
valley of Slosella in Dalmatia,-but he could not absolutely determine its character, 
though he could see no evident marks of its being a zoophyte. 
Travels in Dalmatia, 4to. printed in 1788. % 
The sensitive plants (whose sensibility is not perfectly accounted for) seems to 
hold the connection between real plants and zoophytes, and the zoophytes be¬ 
tween sensitive plants and real animals ; but Dr. Darwin thinks the if ungi consri- 
2 R 
