298 
APPENDIX. 
Polypodium phegoptebis (p. 219), heterophyllum, 
various-leaved; incisum (same as laciniatum); inter- 
ruptum, stopped; laciniatum, slashed; minus, less ; 
multifidum, many-cleft. 
Polypodium vulgabe (p. 228).—The mere varia¬ 
tions are— cmritum, with small ear-lobes at the anterior 
base of the lobes; crenatum, with crenated lobes ; 
denticulatum, lobes finely toothed; interruptum, lobes 
irregular and some deficient; laciniatum, lobes 
notched and rather crisped; marginatum, with epi¬ 
dermis rolled back from under margin of lobes; 
multifidum, with top of frond much divided ; omni- 
lacerum, lobes irregularly pinnatifid; ovatum, fronds 
ovate ; serrulalum, lobes minutely serrate ; sinuatum, 
lobes wavy; truncatum, fronds occasionally abrupt, 
and deficient in the leafy portion; abruptum, ending 
abruptly ; acutum, sharp-pointed ; Stansfieldii, Stans- 
field’s; acuto-lobatum, sharp-lobed; apicidentatum, 
pointed-toothed; attenuatum, tapering ; aurito-denta- 
tum, toothed ears ; aurito-semilacerum, ears partly torn 
to pieces ; aurito-serrulatum, small-toothed ears; bifi- 
dolobatum, lobes split in two; bifido-serratum, saw- 
edged ; biserratum, twice-sawed; canariense, of the 
Canary Islands; capitatum, having a head; compo- 
situm, compound, coriaceo-bifidum ; cristalum, crested; 
deltoideum, like the Greek letter A; dentatum, toothed; 
ejccurrens, excurrent; hibemicum (same as semilace- 
ram), Irish ; Kraspedoumenon ; lobatum, lobed ; ma- 
crotis; mediauritum ; Monkmanii, Monkman’s; mult- 
