An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . R. flavus. A large bushgrowing in mountainous parts of India and in Ceylon and fruit is yellow and equal in flavor to the ordinary , 314, 496 (a. 35).]—R. frondosus. See under R. villosus.— Fr., ronce sauvage [Fr. Cod.], ronce des haies, cati-muron, murier des haies, ronce. Ger., gemeiner Brombeerstrauch,Kratzbeere. Common blackberry (or bramble); a shrub growingt


An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . R. flavus. A large bushgrowing in mountainous parts of India and in Ceylon and fruit is yellow and equal in flavor to the ordinary , 314, 496 (a. 35).]—R. frondosus. See under R. villosus.— Fr., ronce sauvage [Fr. Cod.], ronce des haies, cati-muron, murier des haies, ronce. Ger., gemeiner Brombeerstrauch,Kratzbeere. Common blackberry (or bramble); a shrub growingthroughout Europe, Africa, and Asia. The ripe fruits or black-berries, fructus (seu baccce) rubi nigri (seu rubi fruticosi, sen rubiini1garis,fieumorirubi), morarubi, ruba,rubi, contain sugar, gum,a violet coloring matter, a trace of resin, malic acid, and severalsalts. The dried unripe fruits were formerly used in leaves are astringent; their infusion has the flavor of greentea, and is sometimes used instead of it. [B, 173, 168, 267 (a, 35).]~R. liumifusus. See uuder R. villosus.—R. idseus. Fr., ronce duMont Ida (1st def.), fiamboisier (1st def.), framboisier (1st def.).. RUBUS IDiBUS. [A, 327.] framboise [Fr. Cod.] (2d def.). Ger., Himbeerstrauch (1st def.),Himbeere (2d def.). Sp., frambuesa^ sangUesa [Sp. Ph.] (2d def.).1. Common (or European, or garden) raspberry (plant), hindberry,hineberry, the ^otos ISaia of Dioscorides ; indigenous to Europeand northwestern Asia, much cultivated for its fruits, which areused in medicine (see 2d def.). The leaves are mildly astringent,and were formerly used medicinally. 2. Of the U. S. Ph., raspberry(fruit); the fruit of this species, used in the preparation of a re-frigerant syrup. [B, 5, 34, 173, 180, 314 (a, 35).]—R. red-fruited shrub of Cochin-China and the Moluccas, where theroot is used in gastralgia and diarrhoea, and the leaves in haemor-rhages, cough, and aphthse. [B, 180 (a, 35).]—R. occiden


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear189