sigarillo
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Spanish cigarillo (“cigarette”), from both Spanish cigarro (“cigar, cigarette”), possibly from a Mayan language such as Yucatec Maya siyar (“to smoke tobacco leaves”) or Q'eqchi sik'ar (“to smoke”), possibly also from cigarro (“male cicada”), a form of cigarra (“cicada”), from a Vulgar Latin root *cicāla (or an alternate Iberian variant form *cicāra), from Latin cicāda (“cicada”), possibly from a substrate language, ultimately onomatopoeic + and from -illo, from Old Spanish -iello, from Latin -ellus, an extension of -lus, alternative form of -ulus, from Proto-Italic *-olos, from earlier *-elos, from Proto-Indo-European *-e-lós, from *-lós (forms agent nouns from verbal roots).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sɪɡaˈrɪlːʊ/, /sɪɡaˈrɪljʊ/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ɪlːʊ, -ʊ
- Hyphenation: si‧ga‧ril‧lo
Noun
sigarillo m (definite singular sigarilloen, indefinite plural sigarilloer, definite plural sigarilloene)
- (smoking) a cigarillo (a thin cigar, differing from a cigarette in being wrapped with tobacco leaves rather than paper)
- Synonym: cerutt
- 1998, Stig Sæterbakken, Selvbeherskelse, page 5:
- hun hadde tent seg en lang og tynn sigarillo
- she had lit a long, thin cigarillo
- 1997, Torgrim Eggen, Den nye Dylan, page 29:
- Sverre bød ham en sigarillo, en dyr brasiliansk panatella
- Sverre offered him a cigarillo, an expensive Brazilian panatella
References
- “sigarillo” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
- “sigarillo” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
- “sigarillo” in Store norske leksikon