Tea: Difference between revisions

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imported>Aleta Curry
(After a whole bloomin' year, ya still can't get a cup of chai in this joint??!)
 
imported>Ro Thorpe
(cha is pronounced as it looks & does not sound like jar)
 
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'''Tea''' is an extremely popular beverage made from (usually) the [[leaf|leaves]] of the flowering plant ''[[Camellia sinensis]]''.  Sometimes the stems, oil or buds are also used. The words ''chai'' and ''cha'' (sounding like "jar") are occasionally used in Commonwealth English, particularly in former British colonies, but are also heard in England and the United States.
'''Tea''' is an extremely popular beverage made from (usually) the [[leaf|leaves]] of the flowering plant ''[[Camellia sinensis]]''.  Sometimes the stems, oil or buds are also used. The words ''chai'' and ''cha'' are occasionally used in Commonwealth English, particularly in former British colonies, and are also heard in England and the United States.


Tisanes, infusions made with flowers, berries and herbs from other plants, are also in common use, either for their medicinal properties or as non-stimulating alternatives to tea proper.
Tisanes, infusions made with flowers, berries and herbs from other plants, are also in common use, either for their medicinal properties or as non-stimulating alternatives to tea proper.

Latest revision as of 21:29, 19 January 2008

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
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Tea is an extremely popular beverage made from (usually) the leaves of the flowering plant Camellia sinensis. Sometimes the stems, oil or buds are also used. The words chai and cha are occasionally used in Commonwealth English, particularly in former British colonies, and are also heard in England and the United States.

Tisanes, infusions made with flowers, berries and herbs from other plants, are also in common use, either for their medicinal properties or as non-stimulating alternatives to tea proper.