The merchant put some new coals in the hookah, and inhaled deeply.
2
After the meal was over, the Rajah lit his hookah, and said:
3
Giganalee retreated to her chair and uncoiled the tubing from her hookah.
4
They found 276 poisonings involving hookah, most involving children, teens and young adults.
5
And the governor puffed furiously away at the hookah he had just lighted.
1
An unknown attacker opened fire at two shisha bars in the city.
2
The words alongside advertised a drinks afternoon with limitless alcohol and shisha pipes.
3
The shisha delivered to Akinosuke a message of condolence, and then said to him:-
4
The smell of shisha pipes wafts from a coffee shop.
5
The suspect targeted two shisha bars on Wednesday evening.
1
The whole of Turkey is bubbling with labour unrest like the rosewater in a narghile.
2
The amber mouthpiece of a narghile was between her lips and she was enveloped in a cloud of pale smoke.
3
He relapsed into thought, and for some time the silence was only broken by the bubbling of the water in the narghile.
4
Of those Turkish pipes which are used in Egypt, Mr. Lane, after mentioning the narghile and the chibouque or "shibuk," says:-
5
The young wife was looking at her husband who was smoking a narghile, the only form of pipe she would have suffered in that room.
1
The modus operandi of manipulating the kalian likewise comes in for a slight modification here.
2
Afterward we repair to Mirza Abdul Kiirim Khan's house to smoke the kalian and drink tea.
3
Semnoon is celebrated for the excellence of its kalian tobacco, and O'Donovan was celebrated in Semnoon for his love of the kalian.
4
They have brought along the kind old Kahn's kalian and tobacco-bag, and the wherewithal to make me a parting glass of tea.
5
It's closest to some form of Kalian falling sickness but there's no sign of jaundice.
1
I'd let you smoke a nargileh, if you wanted to, surrounded by rolls of blue prints.
2
Then, seating himself on the divan, he clapped his hands, and an attendant brought him his nargileh.
3
I lighted a cigar, and Akong smoked his hubble-bubble, a small copy of the nargileh of the Turks.
4
If the Pasha of Damascus were to go himself, the Bedouins would unveil his harem while he was smoking his nargileh.'
5
He kissed the hand of Bishop Nicodemus, but then he sent his own nargileh to the Emir Ahmet Raslan, who was Caimacam of the Druses.
1
The lads were all linked up to a hubble-bubble.
2
Pa, sitting holding his exhausted hubble-bubble, was as though he had no existence at all.
3
I shall now produce the hubble-bubble and we will transport ourselves into a Bedouin black tent.
4
He had none of the sleepiness and fatalistic languor of the fat hubble-bubble smoking Turk of caricature.
5
I lighted a cigar, and Akong smoked his hubble-bubble, a small copy of the nargileh of the Turks.
1
So the scheme of climbing up the waterpipe came to nothing.
2
There was a waterpipe against the wall just outside my window.
3
He laughed, while Xayide drew smoke from her waterpipe and smiled.
4
Significance: In recent years a waterpipe gains popularity among Polish young people.
5
A burst waterpipe left Waihi without water yesterday for a short period.
Ús de chicha en anglès
1
The catering tents serving pisco sours and non-alcoholic chicha morada made from purple maize.
2
Their beverage, called chicha-a name common throughout South America-wasprepared from honey and water.
3
The peddler of chicha carries around a large stone jar, about a yard in depth.
4
The whole community gathers to drink chicha, a strong local beer, to celebrate girlhood and womanhood.
5
In Nicaragua "chicha," a kind of light beer, made from maize, is still the favourite Indian beverage.
6
The drinks in common use are Indian, and have Indian names; tiste, pinul, pinullo, and chicha, all made from maize, sugar, and chocolate.
7
Your chicha's very fine; and ere proceeding further I will tell ye what our Canallers are; for such information may throw side-light upon my story.'
8
Prescott tells us that Atahuallpa, the Peruvian monarch, came to see the conqueror, Pizarro, "quaffing chicha from golden goblets borne by his attendants."
9
Then was brought out to them in bowls, nearly as large as wash-hand basins, the old Indian drink, "chicha," made from fermented corn and sugar.
10
I think it is generally good for the entire economy, Chicha told Reuters.
11
The result - a psychedelic voice of the underclass named Chicha.
12
At the suggestion of Chicha, Desnoyers accompanied them in the capacity of driver.
13
The great fiesta for Chicha was the Sunday mass.
14
Luisa, the elder daughter, called Chicha, in the South American fashion, was much more respected by her father.
15
"Father!" protested Chicha who was always hanging around, fearing her parent's bad teachings.
16
They came from the "mother country," and to the good Chicha were all Excelentisimas or Altisimas, related to kings.