snuff box sea bean

English edit

Noun edit

snuff box sea bean (plural snuff box sea beans)

  1. Variously the St. Thomas bean (Entada phaseoloides) or the African dream herb (Entada rheedei).
    • 1905, Elihu Root, Elihu Root collection of United States documents[1]:
      Lens phaseoloides. Snuff-box sea-bean. Plate LVI. Family Fabaceae. Local names.--Gayê, Gadyê, Gayî, Lódusong, Bayog (Guam); Gogo, Gogong bakai, Bayogo, Balones (Philippines); Cacoon (West Indies); Boja (Cuba); Tupe (Samoa); Kaka (Rarotonga); Match-box bean (Queensland).
    • 1920, Edward W. Berry, “A Fossil Sea Bean from Venezuela”, in The American Journal of Science[2], page 311:
      The seeds of the snuff box, sea bean (Entada scandens) are mentioned in Norse literature as early as 1632 as of inorganic origin and were often considered to have been formed by the waves and called solvent stones.
    • 1939, The Guam Recorder, volumes 16-18, page 350:
      Entada phaseoloides (Linnaeus) Merrill, also called Entada scandens, the match-box bean or snuff-box sea bean
    • 2015, S Kamminlun Vaiphei, Folktales of the Vaiphei[3]:
      entada rheedii, commonly known as the African Dream Herb or Snuff Box Sea Bean
    • 2016, Bharati Bhattacharyya, Golden Greens: The Amazing World of Plants[4], page 136:
      The other species of Entada is E. phaseoloides, commonly known as Queensland bean. It is distributed throughout the tropical forests from Africa to Australia. Match box bean and snuff box sea bean are other names used for this species.