cigarette. teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- coffin nail
- bogie
- A cigarette.
- ciggy
- A cigarette.
- smoke
Can I bum a smoke off you? I need to go buy some smokes.
I have never smoked a cigarette in my life.
- I've never smoked a cigarette in my life.
I've never smoked a cigarette in my life.
- I have never smoked a cigarette in my life.
- A cigarette.
- gasper
- A cigarette.
- death stick
- A cigarette.
- durry
- A cigarette.
- fag
He'd Phase Out Fag Industry: A UCLA professor has called for the phasing out of the cigarette industry.
- A cigarette.
- darb
- a cigarette.
- cancer stick
- a cigarette.
- cigaret
He praised your cigaret, cursed feebly because his fresh milk tasted sour to him, and quietly went west.
- cigarette
- Tobacco, marijuana, or other substances, in a thin roll wrapped with paper, intended to be smoked
- Cigarette
- gwaai
- Cigarette
- fag
- cigarette
- A pinch of tobacco rolled in paper with fire at one end & a fool on the other
- cigarette
- A pinch of tobacco, wrapped in paper, fire at one end, fool at the other
- cigarette
- n rokok
- cigarette
- A pinch of tobaco rolled in paper with fire at one end and an idiot at the other
- cigarette
- {i} small cylindrical roll of tobacco wrapped in white paper (for smoking)
- cigarette
- A little cigar; a little fine tobacco rolled in paper for smoking
- cigarette
- Cigarettes are small tubes of paper containing tobacco which people smoke. He went out to buy a packet of cigarettes. Paper-wrapped roll of finely cut tobacco for smoking. Cigarette tobacco is usually milder than cigar tobacco. The Aztecs and other New World peoples smoked tobacco in hollow reeds, in canes, or wrapped in leaves, but it was in pipes and as cigars (cut tobacco wrapped in a tobacco leaf) that the Europeans first smoked tobacco. Early in the 16th century beggars in Sevilla, Spain, began picking up discarded cigar butts and wrapping them in scraps of paper to smoke, creating the first European cigarettes. In the late 18th century cigarettes acquired respectability, and in the 19th century their use spread throughout Europe. After World War I smoking cigarettes became generally respectable for women and consequently increased markedly. In the 1950s and '60s the health hazards associated with smoking (including lung cancer and heart disease) became widely known, and some countries launched campaigns against smoking. Declines in smoking in those countries have been offset by vastly increased numbers of smokers in developing nations
- cigarette
- finely ground tobacco wrapped in paper; for smoking
- cigarette
- A pinch of tobacco rolled in paper with fire at one end and a fool on the other
- cigarette
- {i} cigaret
- cigarette
- {i} cheroot
- cigarette
- tab
- cigarette
- cig
Instead of cutting down on cigarettes, why don't you just give them up?
- Rather than cutting down on cigarettes, why don't you just give them up?
Rather than cutting down on cigarettes, why don't you just give them up?
- Instead of cutting down on cigarettes, why don't you just give them up?