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 . C. cordlfolia [Duhamel], C. crassifolia[Lamarck]. The hoop-ash, thick-leaved nettle-tree; a variety ofC. occidentalis with thick and rough serrate leaves, often consid-ered a distinct species. [B, 34, 173, 180, 814.]—C. eplphylladena[Ortega]. See C. aculeata.—C. fructu nigricante [Tournefort].See C. australis,—C. fructu obscure purpurascente [Tourne-fort]. See C. occidentalis.^C. lima [Swartzl. The


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 . C. cordlfolia [Duhamel], C. crassifolia[Lamarck]. The hoop-ash, thick-leaved nettle-tree; a variety ofC. occidentalis with thick and rough serrate leaves, often consid-ered a distinct species. [B, 34, 173, 180, 814.]—C. eplphylladena[Ortega]. See C. aculeata.—C. fructu nigricante [Tournefort].See C. australis,—C. fructu obscure purpurascente [Tourne-fort]. See C. occidentalis.^C. lima [Swartzl. The Trema micran-tha. [B, 214.]—C. inicrantha [Swartz], Fr., arbre de soie, boisd^orme. The Jamaica nettle-tree; a West Indian species. [B, 173,875.]—C. mississippiensis [Bosc.]. Fr., micocoulier de la Louisi-a-iie. A species growing along the Mississippi and Red Rivers. [B,214.]—C. mollis [Kunth]. The Trema micrantha. [B, 214.]— [MQnch], C. occidentalis [Linnaeus]. Fr., bois-ramon,micocoulier des Antilles^ trophis dAmerique. The liackberry,rim-ash, sugar-berry, American nettle-tree, American false elm ; atree from 30 to 70 feet high, growing throughout the United States,. THE CELTIS OCCIDENTALIS. (A, 327.) especially in the South and West. The small, sweetish, astringentberries are edible, and the leaves are eaten by cattle. The bark issaid to be febrifuge, and, being astringent, is used in tanning. TheC. crassifolia is often regarded as a variety of this species (C. occi-dentalism var. crassifolia). [B, 34,173,245.]—C orientalis minor,floribus miiioribus, etc. [Tournefort]. See C. Tournefortii.— foliis ovato-lanceolatis [Gronovius]. See C. occiden-talis.—C. pumila [Pursh]. The dwarf nettle-tree; a shrub of theSouthern United States, with a sweet black fruit. [B, 34.]—.C. rham-noides [Willdenow]. See C. aculeata.—C. rufescens [Planchonj,C. rugosa [Willdenow]. The Trema micrantha. [B, 214.]— [Gillies]. The chichape or tala^ a speci


Size: 1516px × 1647px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear189