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Definition of Coffea liberica
1. Noun. Small tree of West Africa.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Coffea Liberica
Literary usage of Coffea liberica
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1893)
"We have now, however, Blue Mountain and Orange coffee, as also coffea liberica,
... coffea liberica produces fruit at Blantyre at an elevation of 3300 fett ..."
2. All about Coffee by William Harrison Ukers (1922)
"coffea liberica is one of these plants. The quality of the beverage made from
its berries ... The coffea liberica tree is much larger and sturdier than the ..."
3. A Descriptive Dictionary of British Malaya by Nicholas Belfield Dennys (1894)
""LIBERIAN COFFEE (coffea liberica), from W. Africa, is becoming an established
... Should it prove as well adapted to our soil as coffea liberica does, ..."
4. The Microscopy of Vegetable Foods: With Special Reference to the Detection by Andrew Lincoln Winton, Josef Moeller (1906)
"... while they are but 484 ft long and 41// broad in the latter species. BIBLIOGRAPHY.
HARTWICH: coffea liberica. Schw. Woch. Chem. Pharm. .1896, 34, 473. ..."
5. Gartenflora: Monatsschrift Fur Deutsche und Schweizerische Garten- und by Eduard Regel (1908)
"Nach dem Botanischen Garten Kew wurde coffea liberica im Jahre 1872 ...
Soviel bekannt ist, wurde von 1850 ab coffea liberica nicht nur in Liberia, ..."
6. The African Repository by American Colonization Society (1877)
"... and will inform them where they can easily and quickly procure plants of this
highly-prized “ coffea liberica.” A gentleman of distinction at ..."
7. Select Extra-tropical Plants: Readily Eligible for Industrial Culture Or by Ferdinand von Mueller (1895)
"coffea liberica, BuU. Guinea. The Liberian Coffee-plant, distinguished already
by Afzelius. According to Dr. Imray this species has shown immunity from the ..."
8. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1902)
"... was capable of infecting coffea liberica, thus proving that the latter species
was not immune to the parasite. The questions which arose—but which were ..."