[1090] Mon. Ap. Angl. 1. t. iv. ** c. f. 1. a.
[1091] See above, p. [283]. no 7.
[1092] Linné in Coccinella has employed the term Gutta for a white or yellow spot in a darker ground, and Pustula for a red spot in a black ground. We thought one term sufficient to express spots bigger than atoms.
[1094] As this work is intended for general readers as well as for the learned, the above rules, &c. it is hoped will not be deemed without use.
[1095] These symbols are inserted here, because they may be very conveniently adopted in a correspondence on the subject of Entomology.
[1096] Mon. Ap. Angl. i. t. xii. * *. e. 1. neut. f. 6. c. and t. x. * *, d, 1, f. 1. c.
[1097] Oliv. Ins. No. 44. Pæderus. t. i. f. 1. e.
[1098] Germ. Insect. Spec. 486—.
[1099] Fn. Suec. 1183. Fabricius has not admitted this moth among his Noctuæ, I know not why.