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cola English

Meaning cola meaning

What does cola mean?
Definitions in simple English

cola

A cola is a carbonated drink that is caramel-colored Can you please pour me a glass of that cola that you are drinking? A cola is a kola plant.

cola

(= dope) carbonated drink flavored with extract from kola nuts ('dope' is a southernism in the United States)

Cola

large genus of African trees bearing kola nuts

Synonyms cola synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as cola?

Cola English » English

genus Cola

Topics cola topics

What do people use cola to talk about?

Examples cola examples

How do I use cola in a sentence?

Simple sentences

May I have a Coca-Cola?
Coca-Cola advertisements can be seen all over the world.
It's better than drinking cola, though it's not as good as drinking champagne.
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?
A standard 12 oz can of cola contains 39g of sugar.
A standard 355 ml can of cola contains 39 grams of sugar.
A standard 12 oz can of cola contains 1.38 oz of sugar.
The cola made my tongue tingle.
They drink cola.
I used to drink a lot of cola, but now I drink only water.
Give me a shawarma and a diet cola.
They say Coca-Cola dissolves teeth.
Just bring me a cola.

Movie subtitles

I was on an American destroyer, and there was only Coca-Cola!
Right - good luck! Coca-Cola! Some deal!
Oil, construction business, turbo-jet engines, Pepsi-Cola..
Is this Pepsi-Cola?
Attention all Pepsi-Cola bottling plants in Great Britain.
Even Coca-Cola.
What are you doing? You take care of the Coca-Cola. I'll handle the champagne.
Cokey-Cola.
Cokey-Cola?
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.
Kremlin 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!
Coca-Cola! Beer! Chinotto!
Like Coca-Cola.
This is cola.
Colonel, that Coca-Cola machine.
There's Cola, and Vanni wearing his first long pants.
Cola, where's Grandfather?
I've told you over and over! Cola, what's up with 'Ntoni?
I'll just fix Cola's tie.
Yes, I do, Cola! Don't you have your eye on some girl?
Let them go, Cola. They only came to suck our blood.
This is Cola, the one I was telling you about.
What is he offering young men like Cola. men at the end of their rope. doomed to die of hunger. shackled like dogs on a chain?
Cola, what are you doing in my sea chest?
Keep this in mind, Cola: Our struggle is here!
But one thought torments Cola.
Cola, I'm going to bed.
Cola's run away.
There's where Cola used to sit, and Grandpa. and Vanni, and even little Alfio, the boat boy.

News and current affairs

In the corporate landscape, there is the old, say, Coca Cola, but also alongside it the new, say, Microsoft or Amazon.
Simple items like blue jeans, cola, or Hollywood movies helped produce favorable outcomes in at least two of the most important American objectives after 1945.
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.
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.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, German immigrants, the so-called Pennsylvania Dutch, carried them to the United States, from where they later spread to the rest of the world, if only as marketing icons for Coca Cola.
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.
Who is supposed to pass Brazil's laws, the people of Brazil or Coca-Cola?
When Coca-Cola, backed by the military, sets national policy in what is supposed to be a free society, a new and darker page in the fight for freedom has been turned.

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