rowback Β n.βΒ Β«The smoking ban, due to come into force in January, yesterday dominated nearly two hours of debate at the weekly Fianna Fail parliamentary party meeting. However, Mr Martin rejected all calls for a rowback and insisted that the...
smoking Β n.βΒ Β«Yet another attempt is being made to persuade stars, guests and audience at the Palazzo screenings to don βlo smoking,β as tuxedos are referred to here in imitation of French parlance.» ββVenice perfects its American accentβΒ by...
O Β n.βΒ Β«He said some of the arrested youths claimed they didnβt know they were smoking heroin when they first started using. They claimed to have been misled by street-slang or myths spread by drug dealers. βDealers refer to it as βO,ββ Cloward said...
smokist Β n.βΒ Β«The North may have its Unionists and Nationalists, but now there are βsmokistsβ and βanti-smokistsβ in the Republic of Ireland, she explained, creating her own terminology to capture the raw political nature of Irelandβs new ban on...
mull pipe Β n.βΒ Β«I stopped at a red light and some obnoxious kid in school uniform started pointing at me to his friends and yelling βlook, mull pipe!! Mull pipe!!β (thatβs pot pipe in your parlance).» ββRe: Funny episodes related to pipe smokingβΒ by...
smokerβs face n. a physiognomy deteriorated by habitual tobacco smoking Etymological Note: Coined by Dr. Douglas Model. (source: Double-Tongued Dictionary)

