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Definition of Genus Coffea
1. Noun. Coffee trees.
Generic synonyms: Asterid Dicot Genus
Group relationships: Family Rubiaceae, Madder Family, Rubiaceae
Member holonyms: Coffee, Coffee Tree
Lexicographical Neighbors of Genus Coffea
Literary usage of Genus Coffea
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Catalogue of the African Plants by William Philip Hiern, Alfred Barton Rendle, Friedrich Martin Josef Welwitsch (1899)
"... specimens of the genus Coffea, the species may be Cq/ea liberica Hiern, as
plants of this were collected by ..."
2. The Negro in the New World by Harry Hamilton Johnston (1910)
"In Africa the genus Coffea develops sixteen or seventeen distinct species, of
which the Liberian coffee is remarkable for its large berry and resistance to ..."
3. Tropical Agriculture: A Treatise on the Culture, Preparation, Commerce and by Peter Lund Simmonds (1889)
"Botanists have enumerated about sixty species of the genus Coffea, spread over
various countries in the eastern and western hemispheres. ..."
4. Nature by Norman Lockyer (1878)
"The genus Coffea is fully treated of by Mr. Hiern. The C. arabica occurs in four
of the districts of the flora, but not in the two Central regions. ..."
5. All about Coffee by William Harrison Ukers (1922)
"It was thought at first that they must represent an entirely new genus ; but upon
investigation, it was found that they belonged to the genus Coffea, ..."
6. Catalogue of the African Plants by William Philip Hiern, Alfred Barton Rendle, Friedrich Martin Josef Welwitsch (1899)
"... specimens of the genus Coffea, the species may be Cq/ea liberica Hiern, as
plants of this were collected by ..."
7. The Negro in the New World by Harry Hamilton Johnston (1910)
"In Africa the genus Coffea develops sixteen or seventeen distinct species, of
which the Liberian coffee is remarkable for its large berry and resistance to ..."
8. Tropical Agriculture: A Treatise on the Culture, Preparation, Commerce and by Peter Lund Simmonds (1889)
"Botanists have enumerated about sixty species of the genus Coffea, spread over
various countries in the eastern and western hemispheres. ..."
9. Nature by Norman Lockyer (1878)
"The genus Coffea is fully treated of by Mr. Hiern. The C. arabica occurs in four
of the districts of the flora, but not in the two Central regions. ..."
10. All about Coffee by William Harrison Ukers (1922)
"It was thought at first that they must represent an entirely new genus ; but upon
investigation, it was found that they belonged to the genus Coffea, ..."