| Common Palm Civet  
		Mammal 
		with the scientific name Paradoxurus hermaphroditus. The word 
		hermaphroditus refers to the fact that both sexes have scent glands 
		underneath the tail, that resemble testicles (fig.) 
		and with which it can spray a noxious secretion. Its nickname Toddy Cat 
		derives from its fondness for palm flower sap which, when fermented, 
		becomes toddy, a word which itself derives from the Hindustani word for 
		tar palm. This nocturnal, weasel-like mammal (fig.) 
		belongs to the family Viverridae and is native to southern India, Sri 
		Lanka, Southeast Asia and southern 
		      China. Coffee berries which have been eaten by and pass largely undigested through the digestive tract of the Common Palm Civet, are harvested from its feces and used to prepare a type of coffee, known in Indonesia as   kopi luwak (fig.), literally ‘civet 
		coffee’. This practice is also known in 
																												
				Vietnam, the Philippines and in 
		East Timor, where this rare and expensive product is known as café chôn/ca phe chon (weasel coffee 
		-  
		fig.), kape alamid and kafé-laku, respectively. Also known as the Asian Palm Civet and Toddy Cat, and in Thai referred to as
		
		
		ih-hen thammada, which is also transcribed ee-hen thammada.  
			
		
		
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