I was looking for a colloquial way to call a cigarette in English, and the only one that I found was "ciggie".
Can you think of a different one?
Or is the "ciggie" what native speakers would actually use?
I was looking for a colloquial way to call a cigarette in English, and the only one that I found was "ciggie".
Can you think of a different one?
Or is the "ciggie" what native speakers would actually use?
How about smoke?
Can you spare a smoke?
Got any smokes?
M-W:
smoke: a cigarette, cigar, etc. : something that people smoke
Smoking (or hacking) a dart is a term I have heard in recent years in this area (Ontario, Canada).
When I was young "fag" was the slang term in the US, at least in the schoolyards I frequented. I would guess that the term dropped from common use (to mean "cigarette") about 30 years ago, however, as the term took on the (derogatory) meaning of "homosexual".
(I'm recalling that both senses of the word are related to "faggot", which is a bundle of sticks, though I've never fully understood why that word is associated with homosexuality.)
(If one were writing a book set in the US in the 50s, "fag" would be the word to use. But it would be unsuited for more recent contexts.)
In terms of current vernacular, "butt", "smoke", and "cig" are probably the best one can do for US terms, unless we can get a smoking teenager in here to update us on the slang.
Including "ciggie," I've heard:
-Square
-Drag
-Dart (Canadian)
-Fag (British)
-Bean
-Round
I'm a non-smoker.