Some alternatives to look for include yerba mate, guarana, kola nut and green tea extract. |
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Caffeine is a bitter alkaloid found especially in coffee, tea, and kola nuts and used medicinally as a stimulant and diuretic. |
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Regional trade networks deal in locally produced agricultural goods, such as potatoes, rice, shea butter, and kola nuts. |
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Contained naturally in about 60 species of plants including coffee beans, tea leaves, cocoa beans, guarana and kola nuts, caffeine is the most widely used drug in the world. |
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After their reconciliation, the parties come back with kola nuts to thank the court and at the same time present their apologies. |
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Rice, coconut, coffee, clove, kola nut, peanut, and sesame cultivation were central occupations in some African societies. |
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Leaves: cocoyam, kola, paw paw, cassava, okra, eggplant, loofa, centrosema, cabbage and lettuce. |
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At the end of the trial, after words and parables, reconciliation is sometimes sealed by the parties' sharing a kola nut. |
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A daily dose of green tea, goji berry, gotu kola and multi-minerals repairs and hydrates your over partied, mistreated hair. |
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It warns readers against unproven remedies such as relying on prayer, drinking salt water and eating bitter kola, a folk remedy for colds and an aphrodisiac. |
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Here, in the aftermath of the American Civil War, druggist John Pemberton dreamt up a medicinal drink flavoured with coca leaves and kola nuts. |
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Thus their already immense wealth from trade in gold and kola nuts was vastly increased. |
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He then broke the kola nut and threw one of the lobes on the ground for the ancestors. |
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Caffeine is a natural ingredient found in the leaves, seeds or fruit of a number of plants, including coffee, tea, cocoa, kola, guarana and yerba maté. |
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There is an important market for sorghum, millet, soybeans, brown sugar, onions, locust beans, baobab leaves and fruit, cowpeas, kola nuts, cloth, cattle, sheep, and goats. |
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Gardens of tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, and tobacco are scattered in the shade of fruit trees, and coffee trees, kola nuts, and oil palms are important cash crops. |
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When the real thing came on the market in 1885, it was a secret blend of carbonated water, caramel, flavourings and the extract of coca leaves and kola nuts. |
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Look deeper and it begins to read like a health food shop with booster shots offering immune-strengthening Echinacea, stress relieving ginkgo bilboa and kola nuts. |
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A main ingredient in Stacker 2, an over-the-counter herbal supplement, is caffeine, primarily in the form of anhydrous caffeine and kola nut seeds. |
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Chemoprotection of aflatoxin B1-induced genotoxicity and hepatic oxidative damage in rats by kolaviron, an natural biflavinoid of Garcinia kola seeds. |
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The submarine was expected to operate from its home base at the Kola Peninsula for 5-7 more years. |
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A glance at a thrush distribution map reveals that summer range extends as far north as the birch scrub zone on the Kola peninsular. |
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There is also corroborating evidence from Interpol the documents provided by the couple to verify their Kola identity are in fact false. |
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It took seven more weeks for the boats to reach Kola where they were rescued by a Russian merchant vessel. |
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The Edward Bonaventure likewise sailed around North Cape and along the Kola Peninsula, entering the White Sea in August. |
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From their base at Kola, they explored the Barents Region and the Kola peninsula, and Novaya Zemlya. |
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On the east side of the 'gorlo', opposite the Kola Peninsula, is Mezen Bay. |
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It is surrounded by Karelia to the west, the Kola Peninsula to the north, and the Kanin Peninsula to the northeast. |
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By later 14th century Russian Karelians established control over White Karelia and come in conflict with Norwegians of Kola. |
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In Russia's Kola Peninsula, vast areas have already been destroyed by mining and smelting activities, and further development is imminent. |
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In the 19th century a community known as the Kola Norwegians settled in the environs of the Russian city of Murmansk. |
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I was recently reading an article about autumn fishing in the Ponoi river, which flows through Russia's Kola peninsula. |
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The flight route was over the neutral waters of the North Sea, along the Kola Peninsula. |
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Norilsk Nickel s production facilities are located in the Norilsk industrial district and on the Kola Peninsula in Russia and also in Finland. |
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However, in the later Treaty of Teusina in 1595, Sweden acknowledged Russian rights in Kola. |
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From Kola, there are indications of a similar situation, suggesting a population of around 20 adults. |
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Today the Northern Fleet ship formation finished its task performance at the Novaya Zemlya archipelago and headed to the Kola Bay to the permanent base. |
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There is a gas pipeline that stretches across the Kola Peninsula. |
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It took seven more weeks for the boats to reach the Kola Peninsula where they were rescued by a Russian merchant vessel, and by that time only 12 crewmen remained. |
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The Sami of Scandinavia and the Kola Peninsula of Russia and other nomadic peoples of northern Asia use reindeer for food, clothing, and transport. |
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Kola was one of the rural localities slated for this merger, and a settlement soviet subordinated to Murmansk was planned to be organized on its territory. |
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Although it was incorporated as a town in 1784, Kola declined after Russia gained access to the Baltic Sea, and was used by the Tsarist government as a place of exile. |
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Golden eagles that breed from the Kola peninsula to Anadyr in the Russian Far East migrate south to winter on the Russian and Mongolian steppes, and the North China Plains. |
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