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1. Awned (aristatus); abruptly terminated in a hard, straight, subulate point of various lengths; as the paleæ of grasses. The arista is always a continuation of the costa, and sometimes separates from the lamina below the apex.

2. Mucronate (mucronatus); abruptly terminated by a hard, short point; as the leaf of Statice mucronata.

3. Cuspidate (cuspidatus); tapering gradually into a rigid point. It is also used sometimes to express abruptly acuminate; as the leaf of many Rubi.

4. Cirrhous (cirrhosus, apice circinatus); terminated by a spiral or flexuose, filiform appendage; as the leaf of Gloriosa superba. This is due to an elongation of a costa.

5. Pungent (pungens); terminating gradually in a hard, sharp point; as the leaves of Ruscus aculeatus.

6. Bristle-pointed (setosus, †setiger); terminating gradually in a very fine, sharp point; as the leaves of many mosses.

7. Hair-pointed (piliferus); terminating in a very fine, weak point; as the leaves of many mosses.

8. Pointletted (apiculatus); terminating abruptly in a little point; differing from mucronate in the point being part of the limb, and not arising wholly from a costa.

9. Hooked (uncinatus, ↑uncatus); curved suddenly back at the point; as the leaves of Mesembryanthemum uncinatum. 10. Beaked (rostratus, rostellatus); terminating gradually in a hard, long, straight point; as the pod of radish.

11. Acute, or sharp-pointed (acutus); terminating at once in a point, not abruptly, but without tapering in any degree; as any lanceolate leaf.

12. Taper-pointed (acuminatus); terminating very gradually in a point; as the leaf of Salix alba.

13. Acuminose (†acuminosus); terminating gradually in a flat, narrow end.

14. Tail-pointed (caudatus); excessively acuminated, so that the point is long and weak, like the tail of some animal; as the calyx of Aristolochia trilobata, the petals of Brassia caudata.

15. Blunt (obtusus); terminating gradually in a rounded end; as the leaf of Berberis vulgaris.

16. Blunt with a point (obtusus cum acumine); terminating

abruptly in a round end, the middle of which is suddenly lengthened into a point; as the leaf of many Rubi. 17. Retuse (retusus); terminating in a round end, the centre of which is depressed; as the leaf of Vaccinium Vitis Idæa.

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18. Emarginate (emarginatus); having a notch at the end, as if a piece had been taken out; as the leaf of Buxus sempervirens. 19. Accisus; when the end has an acute sinus between two rounded angles. Link.

20. Truncate (truncatus); terminating very abruptly, as if a piece had been cut off; as the leaf of Liriodendron tulipifera. 21. Bitten (præmorsus, †succisus); the same as truncate, except that the termination is ragged and irregular, as if bitten off: the term is generally applied to roots; the leaf of Caryota urens is another instance.

22. †Dedaleous (†dædaleus); when the point has a large circuit, but is truncated and rugged. W.

23. Trident-pointed (tridentatus); when the point is truncated, and has three indentations (W.); as Saxifraga tridentata, Potentilla tridentata.

24. Headed (capitatus); suddenly much thicker at the point than in any other part: a term confined to cylindrical or terete bodies; as Mucor, glandular hairs, &c.

25. Lamellar (lamellatus, lamellosus); having two little plates at the point, as the style of many plants.

26. Blunt (thebetatus, De Cand.); having a soft, obtuse termi

nation.

27. Pointless (muticus). This term is employed only in contradistinction to some other that indicates being pointed: thus, if, in contrasting two things, one was said to be mucronate, the other, if it had not a mucro, would be called pointless; and the same term would be equally employed in contrast with cuspidate or aristate, or any such. It is also used absolutely.

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1. Entire (integer); properly speaking, this means having no kind of marginal division; but sometimes it has been used to indicate not pinnatifid, and also nearly destitute of marginal division.

2. Quite entire (integerrimus); perfectly free from division of the margin.

3. Crenated (crenatus); having convex teeth. When these teeth are themselves crenated, we say bicrenate.

4. Sawed (serratus); having sharp, straight-edged teeth pointing to the apex. When these teeth are themselves serrate, we say biserrate, or duplicato-serrate.

5. Toothed (dentatus); having sharp teeth with concave edges. When these teeth are themselves toothed, we say duplicatodentate, or doubly toothed, but not bidentate, which means two-toothed.

6. Gnawed (erosus); having the margin irregularly toothed, as if bitten by some animal.

7. Curled (crispus); having the margin excessively irregularly divided and twisted; as in many varieties of the garden endive, Mentha crispa, Ulmus cucullata.

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8. Repand (repandus, †sinuolatus); having an uneven, slightly sinuous margin; as the leaf of Solanum nigrum.

9. Angular (angulatus, angulosus); having several salient angles on the margin; as the leaf of Datura Stramonium.

10. Sinuate (sinuatus); having the margin uneven, alternately with deep concavities and convexities; as the leaf of Quercus robur.

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1. Torn (lacerus); irregularly divided by deep incisions 2. Cut (incisus); regularly divided by deep incisions.

3. Slashed (laciniatus); divided by deep, taper-pointed, cut incisions.

4. Squarrose-slashed (squarroso-laciniatus); slashed with minor divisions at right angles with the others.

5. Lobed (lobatus); partly divided into a determinate number of segments. We say bilobus, two-lobed, as in the leaf of Bauhinia porrecta; trilobus, three-lobed, as in the leaf of Anemone hepatica; and so on.

6. Split (fissus); divided nearly to the base into a determinate number of segments. We say bifidus, split in two; trifidus, in three; as in the leaf of Teucrium chamæpitys; and so on. When the segments are very numerous, multifidus is used. 7. Parted (partitus); divided into a determinate number of segments, which extend nearly to the base of the part to which they belong. We say bipartitus, parted in two; tripartitus, in three; and so on.

8. Palmate (palmatus); having five lobes, the midribs of which meet in a common point, so that the whole bears some resemblance to a human hand; as the leaf of Passiflora cærulea.

9. Pedate (pedatus); the same as palmate, except that the two lateral lobes are themselves divided into smaller segments, the midribs of which do not directly run into the same point as the rest; as the leaf of Arum dracunculus, Helleborus niger, &c.

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10. Fingered (digitatus); the same as palmate, but the segments less spreading, and narrower.

11. Pinnatifid (pinnatifidus, pennatipartitus, pinnaticisus); divided almost to the axis into lateral segments, something in the way of the side divisions of a feather; as Polypodium vulgare. M. De Candolle distinguishes several modifications of pinnatifidus : — 1. Pinnatifidus, when the lobes are divided

down to half the breadth of the leaf; 2. pinnatipartitus, when the lobes pass beyond the middle, and the parenchyma is not interrupted; 3. pinnatisectus, when the lobes are divided down to the midrib, and the parenchyma is interrupted; 4. pinnatilobatus, when the lobes are divided to an uncertain depth: lyrate and the like belong to this modification. He has similar variations of palmatus and pedatus; viz. palmati fidus, palmatipartitus, palmatisectus, palmatilobatus; and pedatifidus, pedatipartitus, pedatisectus, and pedatilobatus. 12. Comb-shaped (pectinatus); the same as pinnatifid; but the segments very numerous, close, and narrow, like the teeth of a comb; as the leaf of Lavandula dentata, all Mertensias.

C. With respect to composition or ramification.

1. Simple (simplex); scarcely divided or branched at all. 2. Quite simple (simplicissimus); not divided or branched

at all.

3. Compound (compositus); having various divisions or ramifications. As compared with the two following, it applies to cases of leaves in which the petiole is not divided; as in the orange.

4. Decompound (decompositus); having various compound divisions or ramifications. In leaves it is applied to those the petiole of which bears secondary petioles; as in the leaf of Mimosa purpurea.

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