Dictionary Definition
cigarette n : finely ground tobacco wrapped in
paper; for smoking [syn: cigaret, coffin nail,
butt, fag]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɛt
Noun
Synonyms
- cig
- ciggy
- coffin nail
- fag (UK)
- tab
- smoke (US)
- darb, durry (Sydney, Australia)
- gaf (butcher’s slang)
- death stick
- cancer stick
- neen (Sydney Australian larrikins)
Translations
Cigarette
- Amharic: ሲጃራ (sijara), ሲጋራ (sigara)
- Arabic: (sijára)
- Bosnian: cigareta
- Bulgarian: цигара (tsigára)
- Chinese:
- Croatian: cigareta
- Czech: cigareta
- Danish: cigaret g Danish
- Dutch: sigaret
- Estonian: sigaret, suits
- Finnish: savuke, tupakka
- French: cigarette
- German: Zigarette
- Greek: τσιγάρο
- Hebrew: סיגריה (sigaria)
- Hindi: सिगरेट (sigare.t)
- Hungarian: cigaretta
- Icelandic: sígaretta
- Indonesian: rokok
- Interlingua: cigaretta
- Isthmus Zapotec: gueza
- Italian: sigaretta
- Japanese: タバコ, 煙草 (たばこ, tabako)
- Khmer: (baray)
- Korean: 담배 (dambae)
- Kurdish:
- Kyrgyz: тамеки (tameki)
- Lithuanian: cigaretė, papirosas
- Mongolian: тамхи (tamhi)
- Nauruan: tebeke
- Norwegian: sigarett
- Persian: سیگارت
- Polish: papieros
- Portuguese: cigarro
- Romanian: ţigară , ţigaretă
- Russian: сигарета, папироса
- Scottish Gaelic: toitean , toiteag
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: цигарета
- Roman: cigareta
- Cyrillic: цигарета
- Slovak: cigareta
- Slovene: cigareta
- Spanish: cigarrillo
- Swedish: cigarett
- Tagalog: sigarilyo, yusi
- Turkish: sigara
- Ukrainian: цигарка (tsigárka)
- Urdu: (sigare.t)
- Welsh: sigarét
See also
French
Pronunciation
- lang=fr|/si.ɡa.ʁɛt/
- /si.ga.REt/
Noun
fr-noun f- cigarette
Synonyms
- clop italbrac colloquial
Extensive Definition
A cigarette is a product consumed through
smoking and manufactured
out of cured and finely
cut tobacco leaves and
reconstituted tobacco, combined with other
additives then rolled or stuffed into a paper-wrapped cylinder
(generally less than 120mm in length and 10mm in diameter). The
cigarette is ignited at one end and allowed to smoulder for the
purpose of inhalation of its smoke from the other (usually filtered)
end, which is inserted in the mouth. They are sometimes smoked with
a cigarette
holder. The term cigarette, as commonly used, refers to a
tobacco cigarette but can apply to similar devices containing other
herbs, such as cannabis.
Cigarettes are proven to be highly addictive, as
well as a cause of multiple types of cancer, heart
disease, respiratory
disease, circulatory
disease, birth
defects (which include mental and physical disability) and
emphysema.
A cigarette is distinguished from a cigar by its smaller size, use of
processed leaf, and white paper wrapping. Cigars are typically
composed entirely of whole-leaf tobacco.
Cigarettes contain nicotine, an addictive
stimulant which is toxic. They deliver smoke to the lungs
immediately and produce a rapid psychoactive effect.
History
The earliest forms of cigarettes have been attested in Central America around the 9th century in the form of reeds and smoking tubes. The Maya, and later the Aztecs, smoked tobacco and various psychoactive drugs in religious rituals and frequently depicted priests and deities smoking on pottery and temple engravings. The cigarette, and the cigar, were the most common method of smoking in the Caribbean, Mexico and Central and South America until recent times.Cigarettes were largely unknown in the English-speaking
world before the Crimean War,
when British
soldiers began emulating their Ottoman
Turkish comrades, who resorted to rolling their tobacco with
newsprint.
The cigarette was named some time in the 18th
century: beggars in Seville began to
pick from the ground the cigar ends left by the señoritos ("rich,
young men"), wrapped the tobacco remains with paper and smoked
them. The first attested use in this habit can be seen in three
18th-century paintings by Francisco de Goya: La
cometa (The Kite), La merienda en el Manzanares (Picnic by the
River Manzanares) and El juego de la pelota a pala (The Ball and
Paddle Game).
In the George Bizet
opera Carmen, which was
set in Spain in the 1830s, the title character Carmen was at first
a worker in a cigarette factory.
The use of tobacco in cigarette form became
increasingly popular during and after the Crimean War.
This was helped by the development of tobaccos that are suitable
for cigarette use. During World War I
and World War
II, cigarettes were rationed to soldiers. During the second
half of the 20th century, the adverse
health effects of cigarettes started to become widely known and
text-only health warnings became commonplace on cigarette packets.
The United States has not yet implemented graphical cigarette
warning labels, which is considered a more effective method to
communicate to the public the dangers of cigarette smoking. Canada,
Australia, and New Zealand, however, have both textual warnings and
graphic visual images displaying, among other things, the damaging
effects tobacco use has on the human body.
The cigarette has evolved much since its
conception; for example, the thin bands that travel transverse to
the "axis of smoking" (thus forming circles along the length of the
cigarette) are alternate sections of thin and thick paper to
facilitate effective burning when being drawn, and retard burning
when at rest. Synthetic particulate filters remove some of the tar
before it reaches the smoker.
Manufacturing
Commercially manufactured cigarettes are seemingly simple objects consisting mainly of a tobacco blend, paper, PVA glue to bond the outer layer of paper together, and often also a cellulose acetate–based filter. While the assembly of cigarettes is straightforward, much focus is given to the creation of each of the components, in particular the tobacco blend, which may contain over 100 ingredients, many of them flavourants for the tobacco. A key ingredient that makes cigarettes more addictive is the inclusion of reconstituted tobacco, which has additives to make nicotine more volatile as the cigarette burns.The burn rate of cigarette paper is regulated
through the application of different forms of microcrystalline
cellulose to the
paper. Cigarette paper has been specially engineered by creating
bands of different porosity to create "fire-safe" cigarettes. These
cigarettes have a reduced idle burning speed which allows them to
self-extinguish. This fire-safe paper is manufactured by
mechanically altering the setting of the paper slurry.
New York was the first U.S. state to mandate that
all cigarettes manufactured or sold within the state comply with a
fire-safe standard. Canada has passed a similar nation-wide mandate
based on the same standard. Many other U.S. states have passed or
are considering fire-safe mandates.
Modern cigarettes produced after the 1950s,
although composed mainly of shredded tobacco leaf, use a
significant quantity of tobacco processing by-products in the
blend. Each cigarette's tobacco blend is made mainly from the
leaves of flue-cured brightleaf, burley tobacco, and oriental
tobacco. These leaves are selected, processed, and aged prior to
blending and filling. The processing of brightleaf and burley
tobaccos for tobacco leaf "strips" produces several by-products
such as leaf stems, tobacco dust, and tobacco leaf pieces ("small
laminate").
- Reconstituted leaf (RL) sheet: a paper-like material made from recycled tobacco fines, tobacco stems and "class tobacco", which consists of tobacco particles less than 30 mesh in size (~0.599 mm) that are collected at any stage of tobacco processing. RL is made by extracting the soluble chemicals in the tobacco by-products, processing the leftover tobacco fibres from the extraction into a paper, and then reapplying the extracted materials in concentrated form onto the paper in a fashion similar to what is done in paper sizing. At this stage ammonium additives are applied to make reconstituted tobacco an effective nicotine delivery system. The stem is first crushed and cut to resemble the leaf before being merged or blended into the cut leaf.
Taxation
Cigarettes are a significant source of tax revenue in many localities. This fact has historically been an impediment for health groups seeking to discourage cigarette smoking, since governments seek to maximize tax revenues. Furthermore, some countries have made cigarettes a state monopoly, which has the same effect on the attitude of government officials outside the health field. In the United States, the states determine the rate of cigarette taxes, and states where tobacco is a significant farm product tend to tax cigarettes least. It has been shown that higher prices for cigarettes discourage smoking. Every 10 percent increase in the price of cigarettes reduced youth smoking by about seven percent and overall cigarette consumption by about four percent. Thus increased cigarette taxes are proposed as a means to reduce smoking.Many people in the UK now illegally import
cigarettes due to the increasing tax. A packet is less than half
the price in all other countries, making illegal importers a large
profit, while still providing very cheap cigarettes. The average
price for 20 legal cigarettes is £5.20, while imported packs are
sold for less than £3, this is due to the extreme taxation.
Sale
Before the Second World War many manufacturers gave away collectible cards, one in each packet of cigarettes. This practice was discontinued to save paper during the war and was never generally reintroduced, though for a number of years Natural American Spirit cigarettes included "vignette" cards depicting endangered animals and American historical events; this series was discontinued in 2003. On April 1, 1970 President Richard Nixon signed the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act into law, banning cigarette advertisements on television in the United States starting on January 2, 1971. However, some tobacco companies attempted to circumvent the ban by marketing new brands of cigarettes as "little cigars"; examples included Tijuana Smalls, which came out almost immediately after the ban took effect, and Backwoods Smokes, which reached the market in the winter of 1973–1974 and whose ads used the slogan, "How can anything that looks so wild taste so mild."Beginning on April 1, 1998, the sale of
cigarettes and other tobacco products to people under 18 is now
prohibited by law in all fifty states of the United
States. The legal age of
purchase has been additionally raised to 19 in Alabama, Alaska, New Jersey,
Utah, and
Nassau,
Suffolk,
and Onondaga
Counties in New York. The
intended effect of this is to prevent upper class high school
students from purchasing cigarettes for their younger peers.
Legislation was pending as of 2004 in some other states. In
Massachusetts
and Virginia, parents
and guardians are allowed to give cigarettes to minors, but sales
to minors are prohibited.
Similar laws exist in many other countries. In
Canada, most
of the provinces require smokers to be 19 years of age to purchase
cigarettes (except for Quebec, Saskatchewan,
Manitoba
and Alberta, where the
age is 18). However, the minimum age only concerns the purchase of
tobacco, not use. Alberta, however, does have a law which prohibits
the possession or use of tobacco products by all persons under 18,
punishable by a $100 fine. Australia,
New
Zealand and Pakistan have a
nationwide ban on the selling of all tobacco products to people
under the age of 18.
Since 1 October
2007, it has
been illegal for retailers to sell tobacco in all forms to people
under the age of 18 in three of four of the UK's constituent
countries (England, Wales and Scotland) (rising from 16). It will
also be illegal to sell lighters, rolling papers and all other
tobacco-associated items to people under 18. However, it will not
be illegal for people under 18 to buy or smoke tobacco; it is only
illegal for the said retailer to sell the item. Northern Ireland is
expected to follow suit with the age increase. In the Republic
of Ireland, bans on the sale of the smaller ten-packs and
confectionery that
resembles tobacco products came into force on May 31, 2007 in a bid to cut
underaged smoking. The UK
Department of Health plans to follow suit with the ten-pack
ban. Most countries in the world have a legal smoking age of 18.
Five exceptions are Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Portugal, and
the
Netherlands, where the age is 16. Since January 1,
2007, all
cigarette machines in public places in Germany must attempt to
verify a customer's age by requiring the insertion of a debit card.
Turkey,
which has one of the highest percentage of smokers in its
population, has a legal age of 18. Another curiosity is Japan, one of the
highest tobacco-consuming nations, which requires purchasers to be
20 years of age (suffrage in Japan is 20 years
old). However, due to the prevalence of cigarette vending
machines in the most public of places, the effectiveness of an
underage ban is in doubt. In other countries, such as Egypt, it is legal to
use and purchase tobacco products regardless of age. Germany raised
the purchase age from 16 to 18 on the 1 September
2007.
Some police departments
in the United States occasionally send an underaged teenager into a
store where cigarettes are sold, and have the teen attempt to
purchase cigarettes, with their own or no ID. If the vendor then
completes the sale, the store is issued a fine. Similar enforcement
practices are regularly performed by Trading
Standards Officers in the UK and the Gardaí Siochana, the
police force of the Republic of Ireland.
Consumption
Approximately 5.5 trillion cigarettes are
produced globally each year by the tobacco
industry, smoked by over 1.1 billion people, which is more than
one-sixth of the world's total population.
Smoking Prevalence by Gender PERCENT SMOKING
REGIONMENWOMEN Africa294 United
States3522 Eastern Mediterranean354
Europe4626
Southeast
Asia444 Western
Pacific608 (2000, World
Health Organization estimates)
globalize table
Smoking Prevalence in the U.S. (2006) Source:
Center for Disease Control RankState% RankState% RankState%
RankState%
1 KY 28.6 14 SC 22.3 27 KS 20.0 40 AZ 18.1
2 WV 25.7 15 NV 22.2 28 GA 20.0 41 VT 18.0
3 OK 25.1 16 NC 22.1 29 ND 19.6 42 DC 17.9
4 MS 25.1 17 DE 21.7 30 VA 19.3 43 CO 17.9
5 AK 24.2 18 WY 21.6 31 RI 19.3 44 MA 17.8
6 IN 24.1 19 PA 21.5 32 MT 19.0 45 MD 17.8
7 AR 23.7 20 IA 21.5 33 NH 18.7 46 HI 17.5
8 LA 23.4 21 FL 21.0 34 NE 18.6 47 WA 17.1
9 MO 23.3 22 ME 20.9 35 OR 18.5 48 CT 17.0
10 AL 23.3 23 WI 20.8 36 NY 18.3 49 ID 16.8
11 TN 22.6 24 IL 20.5 37 MN 18.3 50 CA 14.9
12 OH 22.5 25 SD 20.4 38 TX 18.1 51 UT 9.8
13 MI 22.4 26 NM 20.2 39 NJ 18.1
Graphics on cigarette packets
Some countries require cigarette packs to contain warnings about health. The United States was one of the first. Other countries include most of Europe, Australia and in Asia.Smoking bans
Many governments impose restrictions on smoking tobacco, especially in public areas. The primary justification has been the negative health effects of secondhand smoke. Laws vary by country and locality. See:Cigarette litter
The common name for is the residue after cigarette-smoking process is a "cigarette butt" or simply "butt". It comprises about 30% of the cigarette's original length. The butt consists of a tissue tube which holds a filter and some remains of tobacco mixed with ash. In extreme cases the filter is slightly burned. Cigarette butts are one source of tobacco for children and poor people. The shape of a butt hinges on the manner of stubbing out. The intensely pressed butt possesses irregular shape at the end and wrinkled tissue. Cigarette butts may be a subject of studies over popularity of brands producing cigarettes.Cigarette butts are a commonly littered item throughout the
world. Discarded butts can be found almost any place accessible to
people, including streets, sidewalks, parks and beaches. The butts
of filtered
cigarettes are not biodegradable. The
filters, made of cellulose
acetate, take many years to decompose.
Many of the filters end up in waterways, where the toxic chemicals
that they are designed to filter out find their way into the
water
supply.
A butt which is not properly extinguished can be
a cause of a blaze.
Cigarette butts are usually unfit for reuse due to inadequate
tobacco and a used filter. Ashtrays and
cigarette bins are designed for containing them.
Cigarette advertising
In many parts of the world tobacco advertising and even sponsorship of sporting events has been outlawed. The ban on tobacco advertising and sponsorship in the EU in 2005 has prompted Formula One Management to look for races in areas that allow the tobacco sponsored teams to display their livery. As of 2007, only the Scuderia Ferrari retains tobacco sponsorship, continuing their relationship with Marlboro until 2011.In some jurisdictions, such as Saskatchewan,
Canada, the retail store display of cigarettes is completely
prohibited if persons under the legal age of consumption have
access to the premises
References
- Bogden JD, Kemp FW, Buse M, Thind IS, Louria DB, Forgacs J, Llanos G, Moncoya Terrones I. (1981) Composition of tobaccos from countries with high and low incidences of lung cancer. I. Selenium, polonium-210, Alternaria, tar, and nicotine. Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 66: 27-31.
- Hecht SS (1999) Tobacco Smoke Carcinogens and Lung Cancer. Journal of the National Cancer Institute
- Smoke: A Global History of Smoking (2004) edited by Sander L. Gilman and Zhou Xun ISBN 1-86189-200-4
See also
External links
- Mortality in relation to smoking: 50 years' observations on male British doctors
- US Center for Disease Control - Smoking and Health Database
- GLOBALink
- INGCAT - International Non Governmental Coalition Against Tobacco
- National Clearinghouse on Tobacco and Health - Canada
- Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco
- Bibliography on History of Cigarette Smoking
- Inquirer.net, Herbal ‘cigarette’ may help smokers quit
cigarette in Afrikaans: Sigaret
cigarette in Arabic: سيجارة
cigarette in Bosnian: Cigareta
cigarette in Catalan: Cigarreta
cigarette in Czech: Cigareta
cigarette in Danish: Cigaret
cigarette in German: Zigarette
cigarette in Modern Greek (1453-): Τσιγάρο
cigarette in Spanish: Cigarrillo
cigarette in Esperanto: Cigaredo
cigarette in Persian: سیگار
cigarette in French: Cigarette
cigarette in Korean: 궐련
cigarette in Indonesian: Rokok
cigarette in Icelandic: Sígaretta
cigarette in Italian: Sigaretta
cigarette in Hebrew: סיגריה
cigarette in Latin: Sigarellum
cigarette in Lithuanian: Cigaretė
cigarette in Dutch: Sigaret
cigarette in Japanese: 紙巻きタバコ
cigarette in Norwegian: Sigarett
cigarette in Norwegian Nynorsk: Sigarett
cigarette in Uzbek: Sigareta
cigarette in Polish: Papieros
cigarette in Portuguese: Cigarro
cigarette in Quechua: Siyaru
cigarette in Russian: Сигарета
cigarette in Simple English: Cigarette
cigarette in Silesian: Cygareta
cigarette in Slovak: Cigareta
cigarette in Serbian: Цигарета
cigarette in Finnish: Savuke
cigarette in Swedish: Cigarett
cigarette in Thai: บุหรี่
cigarette in Vietnamese: Thuốc lá
cigarette in Turkish: Sigara
cigarette in Ukrainian: Сигарети
cigarette in Vlaams: Sigrette
cigarette in Yiddish: ציגארעט
cigarette in Samogitian: Cėgarėits
cigarette in Chinese: 香煙