smoke
Kelime Anlamı :

1. duman.
2. sigara içmek.
3. sigara.
4. sigara içme.
5. (Argo) Birini silahla öldürmek.
6. sigara iç.
7. SİSLEMEK: Sis mühimmatı ile işaret veya perdeleme sisi meydana getirmek.
8. tütmek.
9. tütme.
10. tüttürme.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Tanımlar :
1. the vaporous system made up of small particles of carbonaceous matter in the air, resulting mainly from the burning of organic material, such as wood or coal.
2. A suspension of fine solid or liquid particles in a gaseous medium.
3. A cloud of fine particles.
4. something insubstantial, unreal, or transitory.
5. the act of smoking a form of tobacco: went out for a smoke.
6. the duration of this act.
7. informal tobacco in a form that can be smoked, especially a cigarette: money to buy smokes.
8. A substance used in warfare to produce a smoke screen.
9. something used to conceal or obscure.
10. A pale to grayish blue to bluish or dark gray.
11. to draw in and exhale smoke from a cigarette, cigar, or pipe: it's forbidden to smoke here.
12. to engage in smoking regularly or habitually: he smoked for years before stopping.
13. to emit smoke or a smokelike substance: chimneys smoking in the cold air.
14. to emit smoke excessively: the station wagon smoked even after the tune-up.
15. slang to go or proceed at high speed.
16. slang to play or perform energetically: the band was really smoking in the second set.
17. to draw in and exhale the smoke of (tobacco, for example): I've never smoked a panatela.
18. to do so regularly or habitually: I used to smoke filtered cigarettes.
19. to preserve (meat or fish) by exposure to the aromatic smoke of burning hardwood, usually after pickling in salt or brine.
20. to fumigate (a house, for example).
21. to expose (animals, especially insects) to smoke in order to immobilize or drive away.
22. to expose (glass) to smoke in order to darken or change its color.
23. slang to kill; murder.
24. smoke out to force out of a place of hiding or concealment by or as if by the use of smoke.
25. smoke out to detect and bring to public view; expose or reveal: smoke out a scandal.
26. smoke and mirrors something that deceives or distorts the truth: your explanation is nothing but smoke and mirrors.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1. to emit smoke; throw off volatile matter in the form of vapor or exhalation; reek; fume; especially, to send off visible vapor as the product of combustion.
2. to burn; be kindled; rage; fume.
3. to raise a dust or smoke by rapid motion.
4. to smell or hunt something out; suspect something; perceive a hidden fact or meaning.
5. to permit the passage of smoke outward instead of drawing it upward; send out smoke for want of sufficient draft: said of chimneys, stoves, etc.
6. to draw fumes of burning tobacco, opium, or the like, into, and emit them from, the mouth; use tobacco or opium in this manner.
7. to suffer as from overwork or hard treatment; be punished.
8. to emit dust, as when beaten.
9. to apply smoke to; blacken with smoke; hang in smoke; medicate or dry by smoke; fumigate: as, to smoke infected clothing; to subject to the action of smoke, as meat; cure by means of smoke; smoke-dry; also, to incense.
10. to affect in some way with smoke; especially, to drive or expel by smoke: generally with out; also, to destroy or kill, as bees, by smoke.
11. to draw smoke from into the mouth and puff it out; also, to burn or use in smoking; inhale the smoke of: as, to smoke tobacco or opium; to smoke a pipe or a cigar.
12. to smell out; find out; scent; perceive; perceive the meaning of; suspect.
13. to sneer at; quiz; ridicule to one's face.
14. to raise dust from by beating; “dust”: as, I'll smoke his jacket for him.
15. to get away; skip; skedaddle.
16. the exhalation, visible vapor, or material that escapes or is expelled from a burning substance during combustion: applied especially to the volatile matter expelled from wood, coal, peat, etc., together with the solid matter which is carried off in suspension with it, that expelled from metallic substances being more generally called fume or fumes.
17. anything that resembles smoke; steam; vapor; watery exhalations; dust.
18. hence something unsubstantial; something ephemeral or transient: as, the affair ended in smoke.
19. the act or process of drawing in and puffing out the fumes of burning tobacco, opium, or the like.
20. A chimney.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia