释义 |
stogie noun- a cigar US, 1873
- Mandon reached in to take out some stogies[.] — Horace McCoy, Kiss Tomorrow Good-bye, p. 185, 1948 “Sue me,” he said, taking a good pull on the stogie. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 96, 1952
- There, after each of us had a mighty sip of toddy and I had been allowed a few puffs from his Pittsburgh stogie, he delivered himself of a lecture. — Jim Thompson, Bad Boy, p. 300, 1953
- In his mouth was a twisted stogie; in his hand was the newspaper of the White Citizens Council. — Max Shulman, Anyone Got a Match?, p. 208, 1964
- an extra-large marijuana cigarette US
Derives ultimately from Conestoga, a town in Pennsylvania, and the name given to a horse-drawn freight wagon originating in that region in the C18. Conestoga (the town and the wagon) abbreviated to “Stogy”; “Stogy drivers”, apparently, smoked a coarse cigar which became known as a “stogie”, and by the late C19 a “stogie” was a generic cheap or roughly made cigar. - — Edith A. Folb, runnin’ down some lines, p. 256, 1980
- One matchbox of pot for five bucks, and man, you were really hold; you had a lot of marijuana! We used to roll them in brown paper, three or four of us smoking these stogies as we made our way down the street. — Ralph “Sonny” Barger, Hell’s Angel, p. 21, 2000
- a cigarette US
- — Lois Stavsky et al., A2Z, p. 97, 1995
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