70 adjectives to describe cigars

"'It's very good,' ses Bob, sipping his, 'but it wants a sixpenny cigar to go with it.

On arriving at Dawson City, luxuries will be found to be very high; what is to be considered a very cheap cigar in the United States, two for 5 cents, sells in Dawson City at 50 cents each.

An unlighted cigar was in his mouth, and he sat leaning back in a revolving chair.

" He seated himself very comfortably and lighted a fat, black cigar, which he chewed as he smoked.

He looked at me with a smile, accepted the proffered cigar, and replied in a voice which comported perfectly with his size and appearance: "I think my curiosity overcomes any objections I might have."

Among laboring men, the most available medium of courtesy is the little paper cigar; it contains about four whiffs, and is smoked by about that number of separate persons.

While Maulevrier was with his grandmother John Hammond was smoking a solitary cigar on the terrace, contemplating the mountain landscape in its cold March greyness, and wondering very much to find himself again at Fellside.

" I felt in my pocket, laughing, and discovered that I had a couple of those long thin penny cigars which I always smoke in Italy, and which are so dear to the Tuscan palate.

During the dog watches, often, every man aboard would be below, for at that period Captain Selover loved to take the wheel in person, a thick cigar between his lips, the dingy checked shirt wide open to expose his hairy chest to the breeze.

Has Caesar got a sand crack?" and Louis sauntered up, the inevitable cigar between his lips.

He had a big unlit cigar in his mouth, which he was constantly chewing.

Joewonder of wonderswas doing nothing, but sitting back like a gray wreck, with his feet crossed on his desk, and a vile cigar in his mouth.

Paul was smoking a post-prandial cigar.

They also brought us mangoes and other native fruits, and queer cigars of most abominable flavor.

" The editor was sitting far back in his chair again, chewing absently on the extinct cigar.

I was resting myself in the arm-chair, and smoking one of those infamous cigars that nearly suffocate me, just for company, and I was composing in my mind a letter to the authorities of the University, requesting that I might begin to lecture again.

In fact, at that moment, Burgess, in the boarding-house backyard, was promenading up and down, leering at the Swedish scullion, and enjoying the last expensive cigar that his master was likely to purchase in many a day.

The last time Billie Hicks was up here he smoked sixteen Invincible cigars.

7. Smoke many costly Havana cigars.

The windows, it appears, were locked to prevent throwing out of lighted cigars or matches.

The remark attributed to Mr. A.J. BALFOUR, that he always thought Colorado was the name of a twopenny cigar, has failed to make the situation easier.

Paul was smoking a post-prandial cigar.

On the other hand, that eminent citizen of our Union, General Thomas Thumb, was about that time professionally examined in London, and his verdict on tobacco was quoted to be, that it was "one of his chief comforts"; also mention was made of a hapless quack who announced himself as coming from Boston, and who, to keep up the Yankee reputation, issued a combined advertisement of "medical advice gratis" and "prime cigars.

A man past middle age, he sat in a wicker chair below, smoking innumerable cigars and saying nothing.

The light cigar soothed his weary and overstrained mind.

70 adjectives to describe  cigars