Citations:yallah


 * 1862, Peter Lund Simmonds, The Technologist. Ed. by P.L. Simmonds, page 2:
 * [The oil] obtained also from the kernels of the fruit, is an article of common consumption in India, and may often be met with under the names of Mowha or Yallah oil in the London market.
 * 1871, Edward Balfour, Cyclopædia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia, Commercial, Industrial and Scientific: Products of the Mineral, Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms, Useful Arts and Manufactures, page 347:
 * Mahwa Oil is obtained from the kernels of the fruit, is an article of common consumption in India, and may often be met with under the names of Mohwa or yallah oil in the London market.
 * 1919, Edward Lewis Sturtevant, Sturtevant's Notes on Edible Plants, page 84:
 * B. latifolia Roxb. Epie. Mahoua. Yallah-Oil Plant. East Indies. The succulent flowers fall by night in large quantities from the tree, are gathered early in the morning, dried in the sun and sold in the bazaars as an important article of food.*
 * 1919, Edward Lewis Sturtevant, Sturtevant's Notes on Edible Plants, page 84:
 * B. latifolia Roxb. Epie. Mahoua. Yallah-Oil Plant. East Indies. The succulent flowers fall by night in large quantities from the tree, are gathered early in the morning, dried in the sun and sold in the bazaars as an important article of food.*
 * B. latifolia Roxb. Epie. Mahoua. Yallah-Oil Plant. East Indies. The succulent flowers fall by night in large quantities from the tree, are gathered early in the morning, dried in the sun and sold in the bazaars as an important article of food.*