coffee
0 sources
coffee
Summary
coffee ranks in the top 0.19% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,377 views/month, #145 of 77,819).[1]
Key Facts
- coffee is made of coffee bean[2].
- coffee is made of hot water[3].
- coffee is a type of stimulant foodstuff[4].
- coffee is a type of coffee drink[5].
- coffee is a type of non-alcoholic beverage[6].
- coffee is a type of nootropic[7].
- coffee is part of gazzosa al caffè[8].
- coffee's Commons category is recorded as Coffee[9].
- coffee's Unicode character is recorded as ☕[10].
- coffee's country of origin is recorded as Ethiopia[11].
- coffee's country of origin is recorded as Yemen[12].
- coffee's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Coffee[13].
- coffee's Commons gallery is recorded as Coffee[14].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as Otto's encyclopedia[15].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as Metropolitan Museum of Art Tagging Vocabulary[16].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as Zedler, Großes vollständiges Universallexicon aller Wissenschaften und Künste[17].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[18].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica 11th edition[19].
- coffee's described by source is recorded as The American Cyclopædia[20].
- coffee's topic has template is recorded as Template:Coffee[21].
- coffee's has characteristic is recorded as bitterness[22].
- coffee's natural product of taxon is recorded as Cultured coffee[23].
- coffee's natural product of taxon is recorded as Coffea arabica[24].
- coffee's natural product of taxon is recorded as Coffea robusta[25].
- coffee's natural product of taxon is recorded as kapeng barako[26].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded subclass of include stimulant foodstuff[4], coffee drink[5], non-alcoholic beverage[6], and nootropic[7].
Use and Application
coffee is part of gazzosa al caffè[8].
Influence
Things named for coffee include caffeine[27], a type of chemical entity[28] and Black Coffee[29], a literary work[30], founded in 1930[31], written by Agatha Christie[32].
Why It Matters
coffee ranks in the top 0.19% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,377 views/month, #145 of 77,819).[1] coffee has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33] coffee is known by 19 alternative names across languages and contexts.[34]
Entities named for coffee include caffeine[27], a type of chemical entity[28] and Black Coffee[29], a literary work[30], founded in 1930[31], written by Agatha Christie[32].