Cigar
in sentence
113 examples of Cigar in a sentence
This is the full photograph, and you see a middle-aged man wearing a leather jacket, smoking a
cigar.
This is a cigar, and basically it's a Cuban
cigar
made out of a Cuban pork sandwich, so we take these spices that go into the pork shoulder, we fashion that into ash.
We take the sandwich and wrap it up in a collard green, put an edible label that bears no similarity to a Cohiba
cigar
label, and we put it in a dollar ninety-nine ashtray and charge you about twenty bucks for it.
And another person wrote, "I would fill a big bathtub with money and get in the tub while smoking a big fat
cigar
and sipping a glass of champagne."
One: each house's owner is of a different nationality, drinks a different beverage, and smokes a different type of
cigar.
Now that the only spot in the grid without a
cigar
and a drink is in the fifth column, that must be the home of the person in clue twelve.
The fourth house is now the only one missing a nationality and a
cigar
brand, so the Prince-smoking German from clue thirteen must live there.
And I like the guy with the
cigar
at the bottom there.
And he told me that he would go to his work every morning with a paper bag with his lunch and one
cigar.
That one
cigar
was the only luxury he could afford for himself.
And after lunch, he would have that one
cigar.
And until the day he died in the Hogeweyk, he was in this little shed, every day, after lunch, to smoke his
cigar.
With actors that are as wooden as a
cigar
store indian, a script that was written by the director's 4-year-old son, a camera that was stolen from a burning pawn shop, poverty-row special effects, and to top it off, a director that thought making this crap would make them famous.
There's an army man; big black general with a permanent
cigar
in his mouth, with the "AaarrrGH!i'm the Man!" attitude, such a pathetic bad guy.
Let's see, George Kennedy, the
cigar
chomping "tough guy" mechanic of the original has somehow been promoted to airline captain, and, after the Concorde comes under missile attack (don't ask), he resorts to stunts like shooting a flare gun out the cockpit window despite (presumably) flying at Mach 2, all the while doing the sort of wild high-G evasive maneuvers that would have ripped the wings off any real airliner, never mind the effect of the passengers!
Both work at a
cigar
stand in the lobby of an office building.
Close but no
cigar!
In the end she sorta foreshadows by when she look at Schuylers shoes and the way he let his
cigar
ashes fall on the floor the way Jim did the same kinda thing.
He knows he's Michael, a
cigar
smoking, womanizing, magical arch angel that came down to live with a dying lady and is now in a car with the staff of "The National Mirror" and their dog, Sparky, on the way to Chicago.
Jeannette Nolan plays the other woman of the house, the housekeeper who prides herself on her talents and chides Columbo's sloppy and often typical behavior with his
cigar.
(For anyone interested in film technique another movie by Kalatozov, I AM CUBA, has at least two superb set pieces - one of them a long tracking shot that begins with a funeral procession through the streets of Havana, rises two stories to a
cigar
factory, tracks though the window and follows the procession down a long, long avenue - all without a cut.)
Second-in-command Melvin Purvis (Ben Johnson), surveys the situations, sticks a lighted
cigar
in his mouth, picks up two loaded .45-caliber
The characters are so wooden when delivering their lines that they should be standing out in front of a
cigar
store.
The scene in "Little Man" where he's looking in the bathroom mirror shaving with a
cigar
in his mouth is straight from the cartoon.
a bit slow and boring, the tale of an old man and his wife living a delapidated building and interacting with a fixed cast of characters like the mailman, the brothers sitting on the porch, the wealthy
cigar
smoking man.
He's deep in meditation, puffing gently on a cigar, swirls of smoke from the
cigar
circling slowly upwards as he thinks.
Much helped by a very decent performance from Corrado Pani as the
cigar
chomping guy who seeks to unravel one of the most complicated of tales.
Oh, yes I forgot to mention the "special effects"... it looks like they couldn't afford a smoke machine so smoke is created by a guy with a
cigar
off-screen.
I don't think I've ever seen another movie that captured this bit of Americana so vividly: you can almost smell the freshly-cut grass and the
cigar
smoke in the air!
Nice try, but no
cigar.
Next
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