cassia - meaning and definition. What is cassia
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What (who) is cassia - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Cassia (disambiguation); Cassia (plant); Cassia (legume)

Cassia         
·noun A genus of leguminous plants (herbs, shrubs, or trees) of many species, most of which have purgative qualities. The leaves of several species furnish the senna used in medicine.
II. Cassia ·noun The bark of several species of Cinnamomum grown in China, ·etc.; Chinese cinnamon. It is imported as cassia, but commonly sold as cinnamon, from which it differs more or less in strength and flavor, and the amount of outer bark attached.
cassia         
['kas??]
¦ noun
1. a leguminous tree or plant of warm climates, producing senna and other valuable products. [Genus Cassia: numerous species.]
2. the aromatic bark of an East Asian tree (Cinnamomum aromaticum), yielding an inferior kind of cinnamon.
Origin
from L., prob. orig. denoting wild cinnamon, via Gk from Heb. qe?i?ah.
Cassià Maria Just         
SPANISH ABBOT
Cassia Maria Just
Cassià Maria Just i Riba (; 22 August 1926 – 12 March 2008) was a Catalan (Spanish) cleric and the abbot of Santa Maria de Montserrat from 1966 to 1989.

Wikipedia

Cassia

Cassia typically refers to cassia bark, the spice made from the bark of East Asian evergreen trees.

Cassia may also refer to:

Examples of use of cassia
1. Cassia Pereira, office manager for AP‘s Jerusalem bureau, watched the attack unfold outside her window.
2. On Friday night Mrs Johnson took children Cassia, Milo, Lara and Theo to City Hall to see their father make his acceptance speech.
3. Brazil‘s airwaves have also been invaded by Stones–mania, with the band‘s back catalogue being pumped out alongside domestic cover versions such as the rock singer Cassia Eller‘s version of Satisfaction.
4. During the trial, the victim‘s mother Rita de Cassia Vieira told the court her son had said he was going to pick fruit with Chagas on the day he was killed.
5. We now know that the compound consisted of Sodom salt, ground sea–shells, camphor gum–resin or myrrh, a rare cyclamen, terebinth gum–resin or frankincense, spikenard, cassia, cinnamon, gum–balm, saffron and maaleh ashan, a substance which made the smoke rise majestically.