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The most primitive form of the second maxillæ occurs in the Orthoptera and in the Termitidæ. The palpifer is either single (Periplaneta, Diapheromera, Gryllidæ) or double (Blatta orientalis, Locustidæ). In Prisopus the single piece in front of the palpifer is in other forms divided, each half (Blatta, Locustidæ, Acrydidæ) bearing the two “paraglossæ,” which appendages in reality are the homologues of the lacinia and galea of the first maxillæ.[16] In the Termitidæ (Fig. 65) the lingua is not differentiated from the palpifer, and the two paraglossæ (or the lamina externa and interna of some authors) with the palpus are easily seen to be the homologues of the three lobes of the first maxillæ. In the Perlidæ (Pteronarcys, Fig. 66) the palpifer is divided, while the four paraglossæ arise, as in Prisopus and Anisomorpha, from an undivided piece, the lingua not being visible from without. In the Neuroptera the lingua or ligula is a large, broad, single lobe, without “paraglossæ,” and the palpifer is either single (Myrmeleon, Fig. 67), or divided (Mantispa, Fig. 68). In Corydalus (Fig. 29) the palpifer forms a single piece, and the lingua is undivided, though lobed on the free edge.