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Sesame
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Oldest herb known for its seeds, which are used as food and flavouring for foods, or the oil crushed from the seeds.
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Coniferous forest
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Coniferous forest, vegetation composed primarily of cone-bearing, needle-leaved or scale-leaved evergreen trees, found in regions of the world that have long winters and high annual precipitation.
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Cassava
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Cassava, also known as MANIOC, MANDIOC, and YUCA (Manihot esculenta), a member of the flowering-plant family Euphorbiaceae from the American tropics.
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Plum
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Plum, fruit of the genus Prunus of the rose family (Rosaceae). Like the peach and cherry, it is a stone, or drupe, fruit.
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Pitcher plant
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pitcher plant, common name for any insect- catching plant with pitcher-shaped leaves
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Birch
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birch, common name for about 40 species of short-lived ornamental and timber trees and shrubs comprising the genus Betula (family Betulaceae), distributed throughout cool regions of the Northern Hemisphere. Ivory birch (family Euphorbiaceae) and West Indian birch (family Burseraceae) are not true birches. The name bog birch is applied to a species of buckthorn (q.v.), as well as to B. glandulosa.
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Bignoniaceae
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Bignoniaceae, the trumpet creeper or catalpa family of the figwort order of flowering plants (Scrophulariales). It contains about 120 genera and 650 species of trees, shrubs, and, most commonly, vines, mostly of tropical America, tropical Africa, and the IndoMalayan region.
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Tobacco
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tobacco, any of numerous species of Nicotiana or the cured leaves of several of the species that are used after processing in various ways for smoking, snuffing, chewing, and extracting of nicotine.
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