yerba mate - meaning and definition. What is yerba mate
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What (who) is yerba mate - definition

SPECIES OF PLANT
Yerba Mate; Hierba mate; Yerba; Ilex paraguariensis; Yerba máte; Despalado; Ilex paraguensis; Yerba Maté; Erva-mate; Yerba matte; Yerba maté; Ilex paraguayensis; Yerba-maté
  • bombilla}}
  • Steaming mate [[infusion]] in a cup that resembles a [[gourd]], the customary vessel
  • Selection of yerba mate gourds and bombillas at a street vendor in Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Plantation in [[Misiones]], Argentina
  • Yerba mate growing in the wild
  • Yerba for sale in the open-air market of [[La Boqueria]] in [[Barcelona]], Spain
  • Yerba mate shop, Puerto Iguazu, Argentina
  • New growth evident on young yerba mate plant

yerba mate         
['j?:b. ?mate?]
¦ noun another term for mate.
Origin
C19: from Sp., lit. 'herb'.
Yerba         
·noun An herb; a plant.
Máté Toroczkai         
BISHOP OF THE UNITARIAN CHURCH IN CLUJ
Maté Toroczkai; Mate Toroczkai
Máté Torockai (1553 in Torockó – 1616 in Kolozsvár) was the fifth bishop of the Unitarian Church in Kolozsvár (today: Cluj-Napoca, Romania). He translated many of the Latin works of György Enyedi into Hungarian.

Wikipedia

Yerba mate

Yerba mate or yerba-maté (Ilex paraguariensis; from Spanish [ˈʝeɾβa ˈmate]; Portuguese: erva-mate, Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈɛɾvɐ ˈmatɨ] or [ˈɛʁvɐ ˈmatʃi]; Guarani: ka'a, IPA: [kaʔa]) is a plant species of the holly genus Ilex native to South America. It was named by the French botanist Augustin Saint-Hilaire. The leaves of the plant can be steeped in hot water to make a beverage known as mate. Brewed cold, it is used to make tereré. Both the plant and the beverage contain caffeine.

The indigenous Guaraní and some Tupí communities (whose territory covered present-day Paraguay) first cultivated and consumed yerba mate prior to European colonization of the Americas. Its consumption was exclusive to the natives of only two regions of the territory that today is Paraguay, more specifically the departments of Amambay and Alto Paraná. After the Jesuits discovered its commercialization potential, yerba mate became widespread throughout the province and even elsewhere in the Spanish Crown.

Mate is traditionally consumed in central and southern regions of South America, primarily in Paraguay, as well as in Argentina, Uruguay, Southern Brazil, the Gran Chaco of Bolivia, and southern Chile. It has also become popular in the Druze and Alawite community in the Levant, especially in Syria and Lebanon, where it is imported from Paraguay and Argentina, thanks to 19th-century Syrian immigrants to Argentina. Yerba mate can now be found worldwide in various energy drinks as well as being sold as a bottled or canned iced tea.

Examples of use of yerba mate
1. China has even begun importing Argentina‘s yerba mate tea.
2. March 11 2006 02:00 At first sight, yerba mate is an innocuous plant.
3. Diego Balmaceda, 36, is one of several island dwellers who have set up souvenir shops selling things such as yerba mate gourds, key chains and incense sticks.
4. In recent days, as Argentines continue to turn away traffic, meeting nightly over barbeque, drums, and bitter Argentine yerba mate tea, a straightforward environmental protest has devolved into an unusually tense diplomatic row that threatens to spawn a regional crisis with potentially significant economic impact.