释义 |
stogiesto‧gie /ˈstəʊɡi $ ˈstoʊ-/ noun [countable] stogieOrigin: 1900-2000 Conestoga, town in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. - Six-foot-seven Paul Volcker chomped on a huge stogie and dominated a room.
- The usual smell of long-seated bottoms, of sour shoes, of tobacco muck, of stogies, cologne, face powder.
- Winnie whips out a stogie and starts puffing away, blowing smoke over to your table.
- With a cry of rage, he puffed on his much-chewed stogie and fired at us.
► Tobaccoashtray, nounbaccy, nounbriar, nounbutt, nouncheroot, nouncigar, nouncigarette, nouncigarette butt, nouncigarette holder, nouncigarette lighter, nouncigarette paper, nounciggy, noundog-end, noundrag, nounfilter tip, nounlighter, nounmenthol, nounmentholated, adjectivenicotine, nounnicotine patch, nounnon-smoker, nounnon-smoking, adjectivepassive smoking, nounpipe, nounpipe cleaner, nounroll, verbroll-up, nounshag, nounsmoke, nounsmoking, nounsnuff, nounstem, nounstogie, nountab, nountar, nounwater pipe, noun American English informal a cigar, especially a thick cheap one |