among botanists, the most conspicuous part of a flower, surrounding the organs of generation, and composed of one or more flower-leaves, most commonly called petals, to distinguish them from the leaves of the plant; according as there is one, two, or three of these petals, the corolla is said to be monopetalous, dipetalous, tripetalous, &c.
COROLLARY is a consequence drawn from something already advanced or demonstrated: thus, it being demonstrated that a triangle which has two equal sides, COROLISTÆ, a name by which Linnaeus distinguishes those systematic botanists who have arranged vegetables from the regularity; figure, number, and other circumstances of the petals, or beautiful coloured leaves of the flowers. The best systems of this kind are those of Rivinus and Tournefort. The former proceeds upon the regularity and number of the petals; the latter, with much more certainty, on their regularity and figure.