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“Ceylon cinnamon”: Much more than just a spice
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercialNoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is noncommercial and no modifications
Lalith Suriyagoda+2 more
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Ceylon cinnamon: a versatile ingredient for futuristic diabetes management
Dayani Pavalakumar
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Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are widely recognized as a prominent antimicrobial agent and have found applications in the field of medicine. This study focuses on the synthesis of AgNPs utilizing the natural reducing agent of Ceylon olive (Elaeocarpus ...
Suranga M Rajapaksha
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Journal of Chromatography A, 2022
Tea is a complex food matrix comprising of many structurally diverse compounds, of which catechins and their oxidised derivatives are of particular interest due to their nutritional functionality. However, these catechins and derivatives exist in various
Yunle Huang+6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Tea is a complex food matrix comprising of many structurally diverse compounds, of which catechins and their oxidised derivatives are of particular interest due to their nutritional functionality. However, these catechins and derivatives exist in various
Yunle Huang+6 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
An analysis of product-place co-branding: the case of Ceylon Tea
Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics, 2017Park Thaichon
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Fast pyrolysis characteristics and kinetic study of Ceylon tea waste
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, 2016Ramesh Soysa
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Banishment and belonging: exile and diaspora in Sarandib, Lanka and Ceylon
South Asian History and Culture, 2020In the eighteenth-century, as the Dutch United East India Company (VOC) became embroiled in the Indonesian Archipelago, the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) emerged as a site of exile.
T. Fernando
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Foreign Trade Review, 1946
The strategy of a world war has imposed a new ‘grand tour’ upon our generation. Via the African desert, the Appenines, or the beaches of Normandy, we travelled to the Rhine; and then, sweating in crowded transports, bound for India, Burma, Malaya or Japan, we gasped across the Persian Gulf to call, usually, at Ceylon.
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The strategy of a world war has imposed a new ‘grand tour’ upon our generation. Via the African desert, the Appenines, or the beaches of Normandy, we travelled to the Rhine; and then, sweating in crowded transports, bound for India, Burma, Malaya or Japan, we gasped across the Persian Gulf to call, usually, at Ceylon.
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The Indo-Ceylon Pact and the "Stateless" Indians in Ceylon
Asian Survey, 1967XWhen the Indo-Ceylon pact on the future political status of the people of Indian origin in Ceylon was signed in October 1964, it was hoped that an end was in sight to a dispute that had caused much acrimony between the two countries. Two and a half years have gone by, and the Prime Ministers who signed the pact are no longer in office.
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