||Sig`il*la"ri*a (?), n. pl. [L., from
sigillum a seal. See Sigil.] (Rom. Antic.)
Little images or figures of earthenware exposed for sale, or
given as presents, on the last two days of the Saturnalia; hence, the
last two, or the sixth and seventh, days of the Saturnalia.
||Sig`il*la"ri*a, n. [NL., fem sing. fr.
L. sigillum a seal.] (Paleon.) A genus of fossil
trees principally found in the coal formation; -- so named from the
seallike leaf scars in vertical rows on the surface.
||Sig`il*la"ri*a (?), n. pl. [L., from
sigillum a seal. See Sigil.] (Rom. Antic.)
Little images or figures of earthenware exposed for sale, or
given as presents, on the last two days of the Saturnalia; hence, the
last two, or the sixth and seventh, days of the Saturnalia.
||Sig`il*la"ri*a, n. [NL., fem sing. fr.
L. sigillum a seal.] (Paleon.) A genus of fossil
trees principally found in the coal formation; -- so named from the
seallike leaf scars in vertical rows on the surface.