Wikipedia
Correa is a genus of flowering plants in the family Rutaceae, with bell-shaped flowers, native mainly to eastern Australia. There are ca. 11 species in the genus and 26 subspecies. Natural hybridisation between the species makes taxonomic relationships within this genus problematic. There are also hundreds of named cultivars, many of which have been registered with the Australian Cultivar Registration Authority (ACRA).
The genus Correa is named after the Portuguese botanist José Correia da Serra (1750–1823), known as Abbé Correa.
Correa may refer to:
- Correa (surname)
- Correa (insect), a genus of beetles in the Staphylinidae family
- Correa (plant), a genus of Australian plants named after Portuguese botanist José Correia da Serra
- Difuntos Correa, a Chilean rock band
- Rafael Correa, President of Ecuador
Correa is a Spanish surname meaning "leather strap". Notable people with the surname include:
- Alejandro Correa, Uruguayan football player
- Antonio Correa Cotto, Puerto Rican criminal
- Carlos Correa, Puerto Rican baseball player
- Charles Correa, Indian architect
- Emilio Correa (boxer born 1953), Cuban boxer, Olympic Gold medalist 1972
- Emilio Correa (boxer born 1985), Cuban boxer, son of E.Correa Sr., PanAm Champion 2007
- Fernando Correa, Uruguayan football player
- Francisco Correa de Arauxo, Spanish organist and composer of the late Renaissance
- Francisco Correa, Spanish businessman
- Gilberto Correa, Venezuelan television personality
- Lou Correa, California State Senator of the 34th Senate District
- Maevia Noemi Correa (1914-2005, M.N.Correa), Argentine botanist
- Mark Anthony Correa, Lieutenant Commander in the United States Navy
- Mathias F. Correa, U.S. intelligence pioneer, lawyer and prosecutor
- Mateo Correa Magallanes, often referred to as Father Correa or St. Mateo Correa, a Mexican Martyr
- Mireya Correa (born 1940), Panamanian botanist
- Rafael Correa, president of Ecuador
Usage examples of "correa".
Docking Bay 5, where Marissa Correa and Atsuko Cortland were waiting for them.
Roger Cortland stood with those restructuring the past as Marissa Correa stood with those remaking the future.
De Goes and Correa, the third ship was commanded by Simao Afonso Bisagudo.
Francisco Correa, and Juan Garcia de Nava, soldiers of the company of Captain Pedro de la Mata.
According to an Argentine legend from the last century, Maria Antonia Correa followed her lover into that arid land, carrying their newborn child.
Einstein and Infeld both saw it, and the Correas and Mallove report it.