Tree bearing large brown nuts containing e.g. caffeine; source of cola extract.
Austronesian language in Maluku.
No hay ejemplos disponibles para ninguno de los sinónimos
A Chadic language spoken south of Lake Chad.
Part of the Georgian Tao-Klarjeti principalities, the contemporary Turkish district Göle.
1Let's start by cracking open that daily kola nut that is the Morning Reboot.
2In West Africa, the kola nut's native habitat, people have long chewed them as stimulants.
3Her jaw stopped too, which was a bad sign because she never completely swallowed her bitter kola.
4But the other half of the name represents another ingredient, less infamous, perhaps, but also strangely potent: the kola nut.
6Gold, skins, ivory, kola nuts, gums, honey, wheat, and cotton were exported, and the whole Mediterranean coast traded in the Sudan.
7The pod of the kola nut, if you've never had the pleasure of seeing one yourself, is about two inches long, and green.
8From Caravans to Coca Cola outlines a history of the prized kola nut from its West African origins, weaving together primary sources and travel.
9From coffee in Europe to kola nuts in Africa, foods and drinks containing caffeine are the most widely consumed psychoactive substances in the world.
10The flora is rich but not wide in variety, including the gum acacia, ebony, several dye woods, the kola nut, and probably tobacco and millet.
11Particular areas of concern included the Kaliningrad region and the Kola Peninsula.
12My brother Kola Adebayor, has now been in Germany for 25 years.
13Kola nuts are still a traditional sign of friendship in West Africa.
14The Finnish artist responsible, Kari Kola, is a specialist in painting with light.
15Not many people have as many job titles as Vashtie Kola.
16This is the site of Darbiyah Kola,-Kola'sFort,-socalled from its Galla queen.