English language

How to pronounce cheroot in English?

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Type Words
Type of cigar

Examples of cheroot

cheroot
After colonising India, we were to gain atoll, cheroot, pariah, curry and gymkhana.
From the dailymail.co.uk
I lighted our ancient kerosene lamp and Ko Latt lit up a cheroot.
From the theatlantic.com
Knohl has also collected hand-painted match boxes and delicately painted cigar, or cheroot, holders.
From the ocregister.com
The figureheads of this splinter group are 12-year-old cheroot-smoking twins, Johnny and Luther Htoo.
From the economist.com
The corner of his upper lip is arching up towards his left eye, rather as though he were chewing on a cheroot.
From the guardian.co.uk
Automobiles have always been central to Eastwood's machismo, as important to his masculine image as the once-ever-present cheroot hanging from his mouth.
From the independent.co.uk
Although most people who reported smoking but not inhaling were cigar and cheroot smokers, many cigarette-smoking women also did not inhale, Prescott says.
From the newscientist.com
The Spirit looks just like Clint Eastwood, wearing a poncho, chewing a cheroot, and driving a golf cart-the back of which is cluttered with Oscar-looking trophies.
From the theepochtimes.com
Eastwood's image was too clean-cut for an antihero, so Leone added the necessary smudges-slouch hat, black cheroot, stubble beard and a ratty-looking scrape.
From the time.com
More examples
  • A cigar with both ends cut flat
  • The cheroot or stogie is a cylindrical cigar with both ends clipped during manufacture. Since cheroots do not taper, they are inexpensive to roll mechanically, and their low cost makes them particularly popular. Typically, stogies have a length of 3.5 to 6.5 inches, and a ring gauge of 34 to 37. ...
  • A small, usually round but sometimes square, cigar that has a straight-cut mouth end and a straight-cut burning end.
  • One of the oldest known cigar shapes, from the Tamil "curuttu", literally meaning "roll". This term usually refers to a mild and inexpensive cigar that tapers gradually from foot to head and is cut at both ends. Also referred to as a "stogie".
  • An inexpensive cigar with untapered open ends
  • A small cigar, 6 inches or less in length with a cigar ring size of 30 or less. Average length would be in the neighborhood of 4 inches.
  • One of the oldest cigar shapes known, though not very common today.
  • Small, cigarette-sized cigars