A type of cigar, with both ends cut, are cheaper to machine manufacture and so Stogies are often CHEAP. Also called a "Cheroot" from French: Cheroute taken from Tamil: curuttu/churuttu/shuruttu.
does NOT mean cigarette for all you idiots out there.
Mark Twain wouldn't smoke anything but. If it cost more than 5 cents a piece it must be foreign and not worth it.
does NOT mean cigarette for all you idiots out there.
Mark Twain wouldn't smoke anything but. If it cost more than 5 cents a piece it must be foreign and not worth it.
by Deingeist February 22, 2009
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Get the stoogie my boogie mug.Descriptive Noun. Pronounced Stowgy.
American Slang;
Stoagie was exported to Europe in 1965 by Roger Miller;
in a top-ten-singles song
called King of the Road.
Meaning = A Partly-Smoked Cigar, or Cigar Butt.
Sometimes Mis-Spelled by Europeans as Stoggy or Stoggie.
Browse/Search Stoggie to Cross-Reference
American Slang;
Stoagie was exported to Europe in 1965 by Roger Miller;
in a top-ten-singles song
called King of the Road.
Meaning = A Partly-Smoked Cigar, or Cigar Butt.
Sometimes Mis-Spelled by Europeans as Stoggy or Stoggie.
Browse/Search Stoggie to Cross-Reference
by Cyril Squirrel April 8, 2007
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National Newspaper
The Independant
By Guy Adams
Published: 18 July 2006
Isambard Kingdom Brunel's 40-a-day cigar habit is held responsible for some of the greatest triumphs of British engineering.
Unfortunately, it also represents an upturned middle finger towards the politically-correct mandarins of modern academia.
With this in mind, Brunel University has removed the famous stoogie from a new, life-size statue of the eminent Victorian.
The bronze is based on the National Portrait Gallery's iconic photograph of Brunel standing next to the launching chains of his ship, the SS Great Eastern, in 1857.
It was unveiled last week, revealing a close likeness, but - to the annoyance of Brunel fans, historians and the smoking lobby alike - no cigar.
National Newspaper
The Independant
By Guy Adams
Published: 18 July 2006
Isambard Kingdom Brunel's 40-a-day cigar habit is held responsible for some of the greatest triumphs of British engineering.
Unfortunately, it also represents an upturned middle finger towards the politically-correct mandarins of modern academia.
With this in mind, Brunel University has removed the famous stoogie from a new, life-size statue of the eminent Victorian.
The bronze is based on the National Portrait Gallery's iconic photograph of Brunel standing next to the launching chains of his ship, the SS Great Eastern, in 1857.
It was unveiled last week, revealing a close likeness, but - to the annoyance of Brunel fans, historians and the smoking lobby alike - no cigar.
by Alan Drinkwater April 26, 2007
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