Re: How mean!
hahaha…kia aawaaz hotii hai chaarpaaii kii! :hehe
no, it’s a Hindi/khaRii boli word…
nihaayat hii kaahil-vujuud shaKhs ko kahte haiN k vo to ikdam “chai, churuT, chaarpaaii” haiN!
churuT = biiRii
biiRii jalai ke…manvaa hamaaraa???
Re: How mean!
hahaha…kia aawaaz hotii hai chaarpaaii kii! :hehe
no, it’s a Hindi/khaRii boli word…
nihaayat hii kaahil-vujuud shaKhs ko kahte haiN k vo to ikdam “chai, churuT, chaarpaaii” haiN!
churuT = biiRii
biiRii jalai ke…manvaa hamaaraa???
Re: How mean!
:k:
Re: How mean!
churt is not Hindhi
Cheroot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The word cheroot comes from French cheroute, from Tamil curuttu/churuttu/shuruttu (சுருட்டு)- roll of tobacco. This word could have been absorbed into the French language from Tamil during the 18th century, when the French were trying to stamp their presence in South India. The word could have then been absorbed into English from French.[SUP][1]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheroot#cite_note-1)[/SUP]
Re: How mean!
oh wow…i always thought it was a Hindi word…thanx! ![]()
kia French log bhii biiRii peete haiN? ![]()
Re: How mean!
oh tuaddi khair
extra-ordinary sharing
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Re: How mean!
I wonder ye Huqqa kahan ka word hai ?? ![]()
Akh Jadon Di LaRi Tere Naal
Huqqa Pani Band Hogaya…
Re: How mean!
hairat main izafe / kami ke liye pesh e khidmat hai
Hookah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Narjilah or nargileh (Arabic: نارجيلة but sometimes pronounced Argileh or Argilee) is the name most commonly used in Syria, Armenia, Turkey, Italy, Greece, Cyprus, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel and Palestine. Nargile derives from the Persian word nārghile, meaning coconut, which in turn is from the Sanskrit word nārikela (नारिकेल), suggesting that early hookahs were hewn from coconut shells.[SUP][14]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-14)[/SUP][SUP][15]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-15)[/SUP] In Albania, the hookah is called “lula” or “lulava”.
In Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria, na[r]gile (нар]гиле; from Persian nargile) is used to refer to the pipe. Šiša (шиша) refers to the tobacco that is smoked in it.[SUP]citation needed][/SUP] The pipes there often have one or two mouth pieces. The flavored tobacco, created by marinating cuts of tobacco in a multitude of flavored molasses, is placed above the water and covered by pierced foil with hot coals placed on top, and the smoke is drawn through cold water to cool and filter it.
“Narguile”,[SUP][16]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-16)[/SUP] is the common word in Spain used to refer to the pipe, although “cachimba”[SUP][17]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-17)[/SUP] is also used, along with “shisha” by Moroccan immigrants in Spain.
Sheesha (شيشة), from the Persian word shīshe (شیشه), meaning glass, is the common term for the hookah in Egypt, Sudan and countries of the Arab Peninsula (including Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, UAE, Yemen and Saudi Arabia), and in Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Somalia.[SUP]citation needed][/SUP]
In Iran, hookah is called “Qalyān” (Persian:Qalyān). Persian qalyan is included in the earliest European compendium on tobacco, the tobacolgia written by Johan Neander and published in Dutch in 1622. It seems that over time water pipes acquired an Iranian connotation as in eighteenth-century Egypt the most fashionable pipes were called Karim Khan after the Iranian ruler of the day.[SUP][18]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-18)[/SUP] This is also the name used in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus.[SUP]citation needed][/SUP]
In Uzbekistan and Afghanistan, a hookah is called chillim.[SUP][19]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-19)[/SUP]
In India and Pakistan the name most similar to the English hookah is used: huqqa (हुक़्क़ा /حقّہ).[SUP][20]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-20)[/SUP]
In Maldives, hookah is called “Gudugudaa”.[SUP][21]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-21)[/SUP]
In Philippines, hookah is called “Hitboo” and normally used in smoking flavored marijuana.[SUP][22]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-22)[/SUP] The hookah pipe is also known as the “Marra pipe” in the UK, especially in the North East, where it is used for recreational purposes.[SUP]citation needed][/SUP]
The widespread use of the Indian word “hookah” in the English language is a result of the British Raj, the British dominion of India (1858–1947), when large numbers of expatriate Britons first sampled the water pipe. William Hickey, shortly after arriving in Kolkata, India, in 1775, wrote in his Memoirs:
The most highly-dressed and splendid hookah was prepared for me. I tried it, but did not like it. As after several trials I still found it disagreeable, I with much gravity requested to know whether it was indispensably necessary that I should become a smoker, which was answered with equal gravity, "Undoubtedly it is, for you might as well be out of the world as out of the fashion. Here everybody uses a hookah, and it is impossible to get on without … have frequently heard men declare they would much rather be deprived of their dinner than their hookah.*[SUP][23]](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hookah#cite_note-23)[/SUP]
Re: How mean!
aapko kya Pakistani Sheesha ke baare me kuch info hai ?? :hoonh:
Re: How mean!
Sadar main bikte dekhen hai aur buger bachon ko kafi shoq hai sutte marne ka ![]()
Re: How mean!
aapne check to nahi naa kiya kabhi…
suna hai ahmm ahmm… nasha-awar hota hai… ![]()
Re: How mean!
no personal experience to huqqa except this smily :cobra:
Re: How mean!
same here… ![]()
Abraham Lincoln would be proud of you & me ![]()
Re: How mean!
Muqwee...in Maldives Huqqa is called ghuRghuRaa [according to Wiki...] we also call ghuRghuRaa [in rural India]. also, the smaller version of it, the hand-held one, is called ghuRghuRii...the name is given because of the sound it makes ghuR ghuR, air bubbles going through the water reservoir...as a kid, i LOVED the sound of it.
did you know that they use various varieties of tobacco with various flavours?
Re: How mean!
Muqwee...in Maldives Huqqa is called ghuRghuRaa [according to Wiki...] we also call ghuRghuRaa [in rural India]. also, the smaller version of it, the hand-held one, is called ghuRghuRii...the name is given because of the sound it makes [ghuR ghuR, air bubbles going through the water reservoir...as a kid, i LOVED the sound of it.
did you know that they use various varieties of tobacco with various flavours?
I heard about using guR in chillum/huqqa.. Nowadays, sheesha got many flavors
Re: How mean!
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Re: How mean!
hahahahaha :D
Is wali manji ko kia prb hai ? ;)
Re: How mean!
Hahaha . . .
Re: How mean!
:D
Re: How mean!
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