Get Free Checker

cheroot

[ UK /t‍ʃˈɛɹuːt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a cigar with both ends cut flat

How To Use cheroot In A Sentence

  • I have a Walter Mosley novel ready to go, ready for that holy moment on the cliff when I can fire up a cheroot, sip a Belvedere and get lost.
  • ‘Ridiculous isn't it,’ he says, pulling the cheroot from its cylinder.
  • He shook his head, reaching to light up the day's first cheroot. RIOT
  • `That's all that's keeping me going, believe me," Dennison replied, stubbing out his cheroot. THE DEVIL'S DOOR
  • It was the color of cigar tobacco, it smelled like the butt of a cheap cheroot, and every now and then an actual cigarlike entity would break the oily sheen of its surface to glide among the citrus rinds, plastic cartons, and Inca Cola cans that dotted the waters. Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates
  • The popular image of the director at these sessions is rubbish: has any director ever actually lounged on a divan, smoking a cheroot, drawling ‘next!’
  • The smell of most un-English food, plus a whiff of exotic cheroots, filled the air.
  • He had replaced his cheroot temporarily with a regulator mouthpiece and was in full-on paparazzi mode.
  • It was in 1960, or possibly 1961, at any rate before the first Beatles LP, that I went shopping for cheroots with my grandfather.
  • Smoke theire Tobacco after a very meane, but I judge Original manner, Onely ye leafe rowled up, and light one end, holdinge ye other between their lips ... this is called a bunko, and by ye Portugals a Cheroota. The Social History of Smoking
View all