Englishfor English speakers
coca English
Meaning coca meaning
What does coca mean?
coca
Coca
Synonyms coca synonyms
What other words have the same or similar meaning as coca?
coca English » English
Coca English » English
Topics coca topics
What do people use coca to talk about?
-
What types of trees are there?acacia alder almond apple apricot ash aspen avocado azalea balsa balsam banyan bayberry beech betel nut birch blackberry blueberry box boxwood Brazil breadfruit broom camellia cashew cassia catalpa cedar cherry chestnut chinaberry cinnamon cinchona citron citrus clove coca coconut coffee cornel cottonwood cranberry currant cypress date dogwood ebony elder elm eucalyptus fig fir forsythia gardenia gingko grapefruit guava gum hawthorn hazel hazelnut hemlock henna hickory ironwood juniper jute kumquat laburnum larch laurel lemon lignum lilac lime linden litchi locust magnolia mahogany mango mangrove manzanita maple marihuana marijuana mesquite mimosa mistletoe mulberry myrtle nutmeg oak oleander olive orange papaw papaya persimmon peach pear pecan persimmon pine pistachio plane plum poinciana pomegranate poplar quince redwood rosewood sandalwood sapling sassafras satinwood saxifrage scrub senna sequoia sisal spruce spurge stinkwood sumac sycamore tamarack tamarind tamarisk tangerine teak walnut upas willow yew ylang-ylang
Examples coca examples
How do I use coca in a sentence?
Simple sentences
May I have a Coca-Cola?
Coca-Cola advertisements can be seen all over the world.
I want a bottle of Coca-Cola.
Coca-Cola invented Fanta, in the middle of the Second World War, for the German market.
Does Coca-Cola contain caffeine?
Open another bottle of Coca-Cola.
Does Coca-Cola have caffeine in it?
They say Coca-Cola dissolves teeth.
Movie subtitles
I was on an American destroyer, and there was only Coca-Cola!
Right - good luck! Coca-Cola! Some deal!
Coca, get me New York!
Come on, Coca.
Even Coca-Cola.
What are you doing? You take care of the Coca-Cola. I'll handle the champagne.
Now, I understand from Comrade Mishkin. that you guys are very keen. on getting Coca-Cola into Russia.
If we want Coca-Cola, we invent it ourselves.
Napoleon blew it, Hitler blew it. but Coca-Cola's gonna pull it off.
If Van Cliburn plays Tchaikovsky. I take my cap off. but in Coca-Cola office, phooey!
Tell him about Coca-Cola colonialism.
I represent Coca-Cola.
Coca-Cola?
And there's root beer and Coca-Cola.
Didn't you bring nothing but root beer and Coca-Cola?
So now you drink Coca-Cola like a Yankee?
You literally saved up the money for your meals, your Coca Cola.
But who drinks Coca Cola!?
Coca-Cola! Some deal!
Let's see, you owe me four sodas, six Coca Colas, two cream sodas and one beer.
Coca-Cola! Beer! Chinotto!
Like Coca-Cola.
Colonel, that Coca-Cola machine.
But if you don't get the president on the phone, you know what's gonna happen? You're gonna have to answer to the Coca-Cola Company.
A schnapps and a Coca-Cola.
Coca-Cola.
Would you cut it out? -Let's see, you owe me four sodas, six Coca Colas, two cream sodas and one beer.
What are you doing? You take care of the Coca-Cola.
Eggs. Mineral water, orange soda or Coca-Cola? All right.
Coca-Cola!
You're gonna have to answer to the Coca-Cola Company.
Coca.? - Ine.
To have Coca-Cola.
Coca Cola. Yes sir.
The waiter's a Spaniard, so ask him in Spanish for a Coca-Cola.
I've got enough money for a Coca-Cola and since it don't look like you're going to invite me inside.
Do you prefer Coca-Cola?
News and current affairs
Evo Morales, the leader of the opposition and of the coca-leaf growers, may be an honest, if misguided, democratic leader, but are his followers untainted by authoritarian desires?
But the most radical indigenous groups rejected the initiative, and the group organizing the coca growers took advantage of the situation, stirring up nationalist sentiments.
Coca cultivation has been slashed by a quarter in the past five years, and seizures of cocaine have almost doubled.
Coca crops in Latin America need to be replaced with agricultural crops, and cocaine use in affluent Europe must be reduced.
On the supply side, there must be more support for poor farmers in drug-producing countries to give them viable alternatives to growing coca.
Most illicit coca growers are extremely poor.
Coca farmers and producers slash and burn forests, polluting streams with toxic chemicals and damaging fragile ecosystems.
If all of Colombia's farmers stopped growing coca tomorrow, unrestrained demand by the world's 13 million cocaine users would quickly generate as much cultivation somewhere else.
In the corporate landscape, there is the old, say, Coca Cola, but also alongside it the new, say, Microsoft or Amazon.
Huge amounts of corporate money from Coca-Cola and Adidas went sloshing through the system, all the way to the roomy pockets of Third World potentates and, allegedly, of Havelange himself.
Every day, experts bombard us with their views on topics as varied as Iraqi insurgents, Bolivian coca growers, European central bankers, and North Korea's Politburo.
Coca-Cola, for example, is contributing its supply-chain expertise to map out health facilities and implement stock-management software to support the distribution of bed nets, contraceptives, anti-AIDS drugs, and vaccines to remote villages.
Both Coca-Cola and PepsiCo use Usina Trapiche sugar in their products.
In the city that bears his name, Ho Chi Minh is more or less ignored, although his portraits loom alongside Sony and Coca Cola signs.
Poor traders like Rosalia want real shops, and for some, Namibia Beverages, the local bottling operation of Coca-Cola, is answering the call with sturdy iron cabins that are spacious, portable, and easily secured.
Environmental protection is also at issue. Coca farmers and producers slash and burn forests, polluting streams with toxic chemicals and damaging fragile ecosystems.
In 2009 alone, the government eradicated more than 165,000 hectares of coca.
In its most recent report on the global trade in illegal drugs, the US State Department stressed the increase in coca leaf crops in Peru and Bolivia last year.
These resources feed armed insurgents, criminal bands and, increasingly, provide the lifeblood for many small peasants, who cultivate some 130 thousand hectares of coca plants.
Washington believes anti-drug policies will fail, to the benefit of drug dealers, if coca growers continue to identify themselves with nationalists who vindicate the leaf's production.
Ollanta Humala opposes compulsory and mass coca eradication, claiming that he would industrialize and export the product to keep it from falling into drug dealers' hands.
President Evo Morales's rise to power was inspired by historic discrimination against the indigenous majority, with the coca leaf as an emblem of an ancestral grudge.