panatella$57456$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το panatella$57456$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι panatella$57456$ - ορισμός

BRITISH MUSICIAN
Slim Panatella and the Mellow Virginians; Simon Mayor and Hilary James
  • Mayor (at right, on guitar) with Phil Fentimen and Hilary James as "Spredthick" at the 1980 Towersey Festival

cigar         
  • Display of various cigar cases with prices in a cigar store in [[Amsterdam]], [[Netherlands]]
  • Vendor rolling cigars at the [[Eyipantla Falls]] in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], Mexico
  • Cigar makers in [[Puerto Rico]], c. 1942
  • [[Arturo Fuente]] cigar boxes at 2005 Tampa Cigar Heritage Festival. The Montesino cigars are also produced by Tabacalera A. Fuente y Cia.
  • A cigar holder stood on end
  • Darker wrappers reflect tobacco type, age, and greater fermentation
  • Hand rolling cigars and relevant artifacts, [[Ybor City Museum State Park]] display, Tampa, Florida
  • Cigar making at Tampa's J.C. Newman Cigar Company, using machines from the 1930s
  • Cohiba Mini and Dannemann Moods cigarillos
  • The parejo is the easiest and least expensive common cigar shape to produce
  • An aged tobacco leaf being examined
  • A cigar case made of [[crocodile]] skin with sterling silver appointments bearing a [[Birmingham]] [[hallmark]] for 1904
  • Romeo y Julieta]]
  • A double guillotine-style cutter, used for cutting the tip of a cigar, next a hand-rolled [[H. Upmann]] ''Coronas Major'' cigar. The "Made in Cuba" label (see [[Cuban cigar]]) is visible on the lower tube
  • [[Harry Nelson Pillsbury]] smoking a cigar
  • Cigars making in [[Inle Lake]] ([[Myanmar]])
  • World's largest cigar at the Tobacco and Matchstick Museum in [[Skansen]], Stockholm, Sweden
  • Long-leaf filler as used in a hand-rolled cigar (slightly crumbled during cutting)
  • Cigar cases from the Te Amo and Sihuapan manufacturers in Mexico
  • Indigenous tobacco pipe on display at the regional museum in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], [[Mexico]]
  • Short or chopped filler
  • Illustration with photographs of [[tobacco leaves]] infested by ''[[Lasioderma serricorne]]'' (tobacco beetles), from Runner, G. A., ''The tobacco beetle'' (1919), Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, [[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]
  • Tuscan]] cigar
  • left
ROLLED BUNDLE OF DRIED AND FERMENTED TOBACCO LEAVES MADE TO BE SMOKED
Cigars; Stog; Stogies; Panatela; Panetela; Panetella; Robusto; Panatella; Oscuro; Little cigar; Small cigar; Winston churchill (cigar); Candela (tobacco); Cigar maker; Cigar holder; Corona (cigar); Draft:Cuban Cigars and their Economic Importance; Cigar Tube
n.
1) to light (up); puff on; smoke a cigar
2) a Havana cigar
Cigar         
  • Display of various cigar cases with prices in a cigar store in [[Amsterdam]], [[Netherlands]]
  • Vendor rolling cigars at the [[Eyipantla Falls]] in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], Mexico
  • Cigar makers in [[Puerto Rico]], c. 1942
  • [[Arturo Fuente]] cigar boxes at 2005 Tampa Cigar Heritage Festival. The Montesino cigars are also produced by Tabacalera A. Fuente y Cia.
  • A cigar holder stood on end
  • Darker wrappers reflect tobacco type, age, and greater fermentation
  • Hand rolling cigars and relevant artifacts, [[Ybor City Museum State Park]] display, Tampa, Florida
  • Cigar making at Tampa's J.C. Newman Cigar Company, using machines from the 1930s
  • Cohiba Mini and Dannemann Moods cigarillos
  • The parejo is the easiest and least expensive common cigar shape to produce
  • An aged tobacco leaf being examined
  • A cigar case made of [[crocodile]] skin with sterling silver appointments bearing a [[Birmingham]] [[hallmark]] for 1904
  • Romeo y Julieta]]
  • A double guillotine-style cutter, used for cutting the tip of a cigar, next a hand-rolled [[H. Upmann]] ''Coronas Major'' cigar. The "Made in Cuba" label (see [[Cuban cigar]]) is visible on the lower tube
  • [[Harry Nelson Pillsbury]] smoking a cigar
  • Cigars making in [[Inle Lake]] ([[Myanmar]])
  • World's largest cigar at the Tobacco and Matchstick Museum in [[Skansen]], Stockholm, Sweden
  • Long-leaf filler as used in a hand-rolled cigar (slightly crumbled during cutting)
  • Cigar cases from the Te Amo and Sihuapan manufacturers in Mexico
  • Indigenous tobacco pipe on display at the regional museum in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], [[Mexico]]
  • Short or chopped filler
  • Illustration with photographs of [[tobacco leaves]] infested by ''[[Lasioderma serricorne]]'' (tobacco beetles), from Runner, G. A., ''The tobacco beetle'' (1919), Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, [[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]
  • Tuscan]] cigar
  • left
ROLLED BUNDLE OF DRIED AND FERMENTED TOBACCO LEAVES MADE TO BE SMOKED
Cigars; Stog; Stogies; Panatela; Panetela; Panetella; Robusto; Panatella; Oscuro; Little cigar; Small cigar; Winston churchill (cigar); Candela (tobacco); Cigar maker; Cigar holder; Corona (cigar); Draft:Cuban Cigars and their Economic Importance; Cigar Tube
·noun A small roll of tobacco, used for smoking.
Stogies         
  • Display of various cigar cases with prices in a cigar store in [[Amsterdam]], [[Netherlands]]
  • Vendor rolling cigars at the [[Eyipantla Falls]] in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], Mexico
  • Cigar makers in [[Puerto Rico]], c. 1942
  • [[Arturo Fuente]] cigar boxes at 2005 Tampa Cigar Heritage Festival. The Montesino cigars are also produced by Tabacalera A. Fuente y Cia.
  • A cigar holder stood on end
  • Darker wrappers reflect tobacco type, age, and greater fermentation
  • Hand rolling cigars and relevant artifacts, [[Ybor City Museum State Park]] display, Tampa, Florida
  • Cigar making at Tampa's J.C. Newman Cigar Company, using machines from the 1930s
  • Cohiba Mini and Dannemann Moods cigarillos
  • The parejo is the easiest and least expensive common cigar shape to produce
  • An aged tobacco leaf being examined
  • A cigar case made of [[crocodile]] skin with sterling silver appointments bearing a [[Birmingham]] [[hallmark]] for 1904
  • Romeo y Julieta]]
  • A double guillotine-style cutter, used for cutting the tip of a cigar, next a hand-rolled [[H. Upmann]] ''Coronas Major'' cigar. The "Made in Cuba" label (see [[Cuban cigar]]) is visible on the lower tube
  • [[Harry Nelson Pillsbury]] smoking a cigar
  • Cigars making in [[Inle Lake]] ([[Myanmar]])
  • World's largest cigar at the Tobacco and Matchstick Museum in [[Skansen]], Stockholm, Sweden
  • Long-leaf filler as used in a hand-rolled cigar (slightly crumbled during cutting)
  • Cigar cases from the Te Amo and Sihuapan manufacturers in Mexico
  • Indigenous tobacco pipe on display at the regional museum in [[San Andrés Tuxtla]], [[Mexico]]
  • Short or chopped filler
  • Illustration with photographs of [[tobacco leaves]] infested by ''[[Lasioderma serricorne]]'' (tobacco beetles), from Runner, G. A., ''The tobacco beetle'' (1919), Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, [[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]
  • Tuscan]] cigar
  • left
ROLLED BUNDLE OF DRIED AND FERMENTED TOBACCO LEAVES MADE TO BE SMOKED
Cigars; Stog; Stogies; Panatela; Panetela; Panetella; Robusto; Panatella; Oscuro; Little cigar; Small cigar; Winston churchill (cigar); Candela (tobacco); Cigar maker; Cigar holder; Corona (cigar); Draft:Cuban Cigars and their Economic Importance; Cigar Tube
·add. ·pl of Stogy.

Βικιπαίδεια

Simon Mayor

Simon Mayor (born 1953) is an English mandolinist, fiddle player, guitarist, composer and humorist. He is noted for a series of instrumental albums featuring the mandolin, live performances with his partner Hilary James and his groups The Mandolinquents and Slim Panatella & the Mellow Virginians, and (with Hilary James) for writing and performing for children.

He has produced a series of instructional books and DVDs for the mandolin, and is also a regular columnist for Acoustic magazine, along with Martin Taylor, Doyle Dykes, Gordon Giltrap, Maartin Allcock and Julie Ellison.