Sheeshas are the big attraction here, elaborate glass and brass pipes filled with water and aromatized tobacco. |
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He said tobacco farmers could explore the cultivation of the jatropha plant, whose seed contains edible oil. |
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Over 1.2 billion people worldwide regularly smoke tobacco products, not including the use of roll-your-owns or smokeless tobacco. |
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Among the items for sale are beef jerky, Winchester ammunition, and nine kinds of chewing tobacco. |
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In other words, tobacco used to be a herbal medicine but public experimentation led to the smoking of the tobacco leaf. |
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Was there actual evidence from your client that the tobacco leaf was cut in order to enable it to fit into bags for easy transportation? |
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Prior to the turn of the century, the Corojo wrapper was the predominant wrapper tobacco used when rolling the famous Cuban brands. |
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Do addicts of the demon weed, tobacco, experience increased pleasure from life as a result of smoking tobacco? |
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But the first time these two came into contact with each other, they had to share the spotlight with, yes, the weed, tobacco. |
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Many of the anti-dope medical trials have been totally flawed because they focused on people smoking cannabis joints containing tobacco. |
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They have also stated that cannabis is in fact less addictive, and less carcinogenic than the tobacco used to roll the joints. |
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Bash is also trying to decrease the number of tobacco commercials and ads on television and in the media. |
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Livestock and sheep are raised, and the principal crops are cereals, fruits, citrus, and tobacco. |
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The witness did not, however, condescend to describe the form the cut tobacco took. |
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On the right is a micrograph of the virus that causes tobacco mosaic disease in tobacco plants. |
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Depending on how tobacco is taken, nicotine can reach peak levels in the bloodstream and brain rapidly. |
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A fluorescence image of 12 tobacco plantlets growing on agar within a covered Perspex Petri dish. |
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These 5 subjects were placed in the lightly exposed group, yielding a total of 11 subjects who were lightly exposed to tobacco smoke. |
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There are enormous bags of scarlet chilis, sacks of tobacco and piles of wicker baskets. |
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For both tobacco and diet there are no agreed targets or internationally accepted indicators of progress. |
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By 1776 Glasgow merchants imported more than half of Britain's tobacco and had lucrative re-export markets in Europe. |
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The four most common tomato diseases are verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt, nematode infestation and tobacco mosaic virus. |
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It's National No-Smoking Day on Wednesday, a day when millions of tobacco addicts try to kick their unpleasant habit. |
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Some people have said it's easier to withdraw from heroin than to kick the tobacco habit. |
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They also grow taro and yams, bananas, ginger, tobacco and colorful cucumbers. |
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In high-profile cases, the tobacco industry has recently paid enormous amounts to recompense individuals damaged by its products. |
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They also grow corn, yams, millet, sorghum, beans, wheat, buckwheat, fruit, cotton, tobacco, peanuts, sun-flowers, and other crops. |
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The air reeked with the smell of paint, turpentine, Bull Durham tobacco, and the aromatic Indian herb kinnikinnick. |
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I was withdrawing from heroin and I was put into a cell, no T.V., no tobacco, nothing. |
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Youth develop tobacco addiction and experience withdrawal symptoms similar to adults when they try to abstain from smoking. |
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She took out a packet of tobacco, rolled herself a cigarette and lit it from the candle that was burning on the table. |
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For example, tobacco plants can absorb heavy metals, mercury, copper, and lead. |
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Inside, long hairs mix with squares over communal bongs of aromatized tobacco or warm their hands on unusual pottery teapots. |
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The bylaw provides protection from environmental tobacco smoke by prohibiting smoking in Toronto workplaces and public places. |
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Eventually he would come up, sit down, then carefully roll himself a fat, untidy cigarette, spilling some tobacco in the process. |
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And then there is a guy smoking a fat cigarette that surely contains less tobacco than greenery. |
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At one point in my life, I lived in a trailer, hung out with tobacco spitting rednecks, and spoke with an extreme drawl. |
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The man proceeded to roll a reefer, clearly spreading out the tobacco and cannabis without apparently any sense of doing anything wrong. |
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In any case, comparison with licit drugs such as tobacco and alcohol hardly provides a model for legalisation. |
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Linn has pale blue eyes, a ruddy wind-burned face, and a wad of chewing tobacco in his mouth. |
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At some sweat lodges sage and cedar are thought to purify the space, while tobacco leaves bless the earth. |
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The health effects of tobacco smoking are estimated to cause the deaths of more than 400,000 Americans annually. |
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I was looking for the Havana of rum, tobacco, and the daily hustle of everyday life, with a little rumba and an oceanfront view on the Malecon. |
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The Revenue Commissioners said the seizure was larger than all other finds of roll-your-own tobacco last year. |
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Though she is allergic to cigarette smoke, the fumes from the mixed fruit tobacco didn't bother her. |
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The aim of the Tobacco Bill is to boost regulation and control of sale, marketing and smoking of tobacco. |
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From 1879 he grew trial crops of coffee, sugar cane, tobacco, arrowroot, rice, peanuts, tea, cotton and other tropical crops. |
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The US, ironically, has been a leader in many areas of tobacco control but has been weak on the framework convention. |
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The Zimbabwean countryside was covered by immaculate maize and tobacco plants. |
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The influence of the Church of the Latter-Day Saints is all pervasive, from the restrictions on the sale of alcohol, tea, coffee and tobacco. |
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The price of tobacco was high, the purchaser getting enough leaf to balance the silver coins placed on the other pan of the scales. |
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Among the 4800 constituents of tobacco smoke, researchers have identified more than 100 alkanes, 150 alkenes and 55 alicyclic hydrocarbons. |
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Andorrans also grew some tobacco, while agriculture was oriented to the production of cereals, potatoes, and garden vegetables. |
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In fact, daily use of tobacco seems to correlate more to the use of cocaine and amphetamine than does occasional use of cannabis. |
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Historical evidence suggests that law enforcement has been useful in the control of alcohol, tobacco, amphetamine, and opioids. |
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They didn't go empty handed, they brought tea, sugar, home-made bread, eggs, home cured bacon and twist tobacco. |
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Other produce includes coal, coconuts, sugar cane, pineapples, tobacco, vegetables, sago, tapioca, coffee, tea, maize, and groundnuts. |
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The implementation of this policy would remove risks associated with environmental tobacco smoke. |
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So until the law prohibits the sale of tobacco and the smoking thereof the non-smokers can go and take a running jump. |
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It originally hails from America where Native Americans used its hollowed-out stems as tobacco pipes and tubes. |
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We also showed in our earlier studies that tobacco smuggling defies apparent economic logic. |
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Much of the material was wrapped in old newspaper, or was contained in tobacco tins, biscuit tins, pill boxes and the like. |
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Plus, and this is a big plus, you don't smoke as much tobacco when you roll your own. |
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Both tobacco, as a model plant species, and alfalfa have been transformed with the assembled constructs. |
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The principal cash crops are coconuts, bananas, pineapples, sugar, tobacco, and abaca. |
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Several-day's growth of beard covered his jaw, which moved and bulged with the wad of tobacco he chewed. |
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He tilts his head back, sucks on his wad of tobacco, and grins at the handful of patrons shooting pool and shooting the breeze with him. |
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The army of arthropods slurped bits of organic material out of the muck, then ejected balls of it like so many wads of chewing tobacco. |
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For example, every time I go to any corner store and ask for tobacco products, I'll be able to prove to them that I am of legal age. |
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It was reported in overseas media that some international tobacco firms have actually been engaged in aiding and abetting cigarette smuggling. |
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Price increases have also been applied to the company's other products including roll-your-own tobacco and cigars. |
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By far the most dangerous drugs are legal, with alcohol and tobacco, accounting for 150,000 deaths every year. |
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He draws on a roll of tobacco, which provides him warmth and grants yet another form of slow death. |
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An AVA is decided, incredibly, not by wine connoisseurs but by the Bureau of Alcohol, tobacco and Firearms. |
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Meanwhile, he has called on tobacco farmers to use electricity to cure their tobacco and not timber because depletion of trees would cause harm to the environment. |
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Even in the Showtime series Weeds, a fictitious tobacco company looked to pot as its future growth industry. |
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Tomatoes are nightshades, a plant family whose other members include tobacco, potatoes, pimentos, peppers, eggplant and paprika. |
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During his initial work-up he admitted he had a 45-year history of chewing two packages of tobacco daily and that his right little toe was blackened. |
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Russia is cracking down hard on tobacco, which even casual observers know is a huge public health problem for the Great Bear. |
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The flowers are used for making zarda, an indigenous flavoured tobacco. |
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It is registered for use on powdery mildews in pome fruit, stone fruit, citrus fruit, soft fruit, vines, cucurbits, ornamentals, tobacco, hops and some vegetables. |
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Instead, take a walk or a quick jog, lift weights, take a hot shower to relax or do any activity you enjoy that will keep your mind off smokeless tobacco. |
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Under pressure from medical organizations and restive nonsmokers, national governments around Europe are finally getting serious about tackling tobacco. |
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We have increased the excise tax on tobacco to discourage young people from taking up smoking, and we have encouraged smokers to quit and stay quit. |
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Rows of bright green, leafy tobacco plants grow in a humid greenhouse. |
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So I got some tobacco leaf, mixed it with water and gave it to the baby. |
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They should stop smoking tobacco and avoid drinking hard liquor. |
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The products include copper rods, sugar, electrical cables, tobacco, fresh flowers, cotton lint, cotton yarn, fresh vegetables, gemstones and gasoil. |
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Done in moderation it was apparently an indulgence, like chewing gum or tobacco and had possibly developed as a means of allaying hunger in times of famine. |
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Part of the experience with any tobacco is the relationship it affords with time. |
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You spice it with blues and skiffle music, and pickle it in alcohol and tobacco smoke. |
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Since tobacco companies market their product to young people, the handwriting is on the wall in terms of the toll that we can expect if the course continues unchecked. |
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Park employees helped John quit tobacco by way of a butts-proof glass enclosure, a drastic change in diet, and regular exercise. |
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In the dense atmosphere of tobacco and conspiracy, one hot topic has been the death penalty. |
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Many native peoples believed that tobacco was a gift from powerful deities who would respond whenever humans burned or smoked it in religious rituals. |
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Customs officials discovered illicit roll-your-own tobacco, which had also come from Thailand, worth more than 1 million when they opened a container. |
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And for those of us who prefer not to have our food tainted with someone else's tobacco smoke, there will be no smoking in the building, except in the bar. |
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They replicated the barbadian plantation model, growing mainly rice and tobacco, and had an outsized impact on early America. |
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If the ritual centers around the oral fixation, and not the tobacco or the smoke itself, you could substitute a lollipop, licorice or hard sour candy for the cigarette. |
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At BeyondVape there is a board where people can record their last tobacco cigarette in brass, a way of committing to vaping. |
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It also remains unclear whether traditional practices such as aging tobacco in cedar or other woods might run afoul of the ban. |
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A graceful swan-neck broken pediment crown, spiraling acanthus, tobacco leaves, all of these help to express the character of the Aristocrat collection. |
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It held aspirin, sal Hepatica, cigarette papers and a Mason jar full of tobacco. |
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Almost all habitual chewers use tobacco with or without the betel quid. |
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Top products exported to 59 export markets within and outside the sub region include copper wires, electrical cables, burley tobacco, sugar and cotton lint. |
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It's that first sly whiff of tobacco on the air, the steel-blue smoke slinking seductively across a shaft of light, the embers glowing brightly as a smoker draws in. |
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This type of smokeless tobacco comes in loose leaf, plugs or twists. |
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I wanted to kill the enemy and be a roughneck and cuss and spit tobacco, come home and do it again. |
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The 1990 study was concerned not just with reconfirming the importance of tobacco but also with assessing the lesser effects of indoor air pollution of some houses by radon. |
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Why not legalise cannabis and tax it to the same extent as tobacco? |
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The precious limited-edition buckwheat tastes like an afternoon in an old library, all gingerbread, port, currants, leather, tobacco, and woodsmoke. |
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Irritants in the air such as tobacco or woodsmoke, perfumes, aerosol sprays, cleaning products, and fumes from paint or cooking gas can all trigger asthma flare-ups. |
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They also reported suffering from Green tobacco sickness, a form of nicotine poisoning. |
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This encouragement, along with government subsidies, has led to a glut in the tobacco market. |
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Pesticide use has been worsened by the desire to produce larger crops in less time because of the decreasing market value of tobacco. |
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Pesticides often harm tobacco farmers because they are unaware of the health effects and the proper safety protocol for working with pesticides. |
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Furthermore, the wood used to cure tobacco in some places leads to deforestation. |
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Many varieties of transgenic tobacco have been intensively tested in field trials. |
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Following the American Civil War, the use of tobacco, primarily in cigars, became associated with masculinity and power. |
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Research on tobacco use is limited mainly to smoking, which has been studied more extensively than any other form of consumption. |
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Cancer is caused by inhaling carcinogenic substances present in tobacco smoke. |
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Inhaling secondhand tobacco smoke can cause lung cancer in nonsmoking adults. |
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The addictive alkaloid nicotine is a stimulant, and popularly known as the most characteristic constituent of tobacco. |
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Polonium 210 is a natural contaminant of tobacco, providing additional evidence for the link between smoking and bronchial cancer. |
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Thinkers such as Noam Chomsky often describe tobacco as the second most lethal substance consumed by humans, the most lethal being sugar. |
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In the United States, maize ears along with tobacco leaves are carved into the capitals of columns in the United States Capitol building. |
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This industry generated 487,000 jobs in agriculture, fisheries, manufacturing of food, beverages and tobacco and food distribution. |
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The colony became a slave society and cultivated tobacco as a cash crop, although English immigrants continued to arrive. |
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Shifts in the agriculture economy from tobacco to mixed farming created less need for slaves' labor. |
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Americans used this right to transport products such as flour, tobacco, pork, bacon, lard, feathers, cider, butter, and cheese. |
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Local farmers have also been criticised by environmentalists for burning off vegetation to heat their tobacco barns. |
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A graduated income tax was imposed, and there were increases in imposts on tobacco, beer and spirits. |
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Before the 1790s, slave labor was primarily employed in growing rice, tobacco, and indigo, none of which were especially profitable any more. |
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Generally convenience goods come in the category of nondurable goods such as fast foods, cigarettes and tobacco with low value. |
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Marijuana smoke contains many of the same carcinogens as those in tobacco smoke. |
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While in most countries industrial and domestic carcinogens have been identified and banned, tobacco smoking is still widespread. |
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Young nonsmokers who see tobacco advertisements are more likely to take up smoking. |
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The use of filters removes larger particles from tobacco smoke, thus reducing deposition in larger airways. |
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Secondhand tobacco smoke is the combination of both sidestream and mainstream smoke emissions from a burning tobacco product. |
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Vermont is fifteenth for dairy products, and Connecticut and Massachusetts seventh and eleventh for tobacco, respectively. |
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The 2009 Board of Health made Uxbridge the third community in the US to ban tobacco sales in pharmacies, but later reversed this. |
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Kendal today is known largely as a centre for tourism, as the home of Kendal mint cake, and as a producer of pipe tobacco and tobacco snuff. |
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Pipe tobacco and other tobacco products were subsequently added to the firm's production. |
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In the tobacco hornworm, many larval motoneurons become respecified and supply new muscles in the adult. |
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Bowen and the prime minister began to soften the ground for the tobacco tax hike on Wednesday in separate events in Sydney and Brisbane. |
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The hard-featured miscreant coolly rolled his tobacco in his cheek, and squirted the juice into the fire grate. |
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There are but two autopsies of tobacco workers on record which could be considered cases of tabacosis and both of them are described by Zenker. |
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A number of witchweed species parasitize important economic plants such as corn, sugarcane, rice, tobacco, and some small grains. |
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As a young man he decided that he would always keep the Word of Wisdom and never use alcohol or tobacco. |
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During pregnancy, nicotine in tobacco smoke stimulates acetylcholine receptors, and causes structural changes in the brain. |
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Arnold Zylberberg sat in the tweed wing chair in his oak-paneled study, intently stuffing Amphora tobacco into his pipe. |
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For the study, the researchers created a customized enzyme called a zinc finger nuclease to change single genes in tobacco plant cells. |
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More than a dozen years ago, the Department of Justice began a landmark racketeering case against the tobacco industry. |
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This species also includes tobacco, poisonous belladonna, and the toxic plants herbane, mandrake, and jimson weeds. |
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To encourage them, grow nectar-rich tobacco plants and red campion, and night-scented plants such as evening primrose, honeysuckle and stocks. |
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Initially, six 50g Amber Leaf tobacco pouches were found together with 1,798 Regal Kingsize cigarettes and 180 Richman cigarettes. |
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After quickly restocking, he was caught with a further 23,980 cigarettes and more than 39kg of tobacco during a raid in September. |
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A recent French law has effectively outlawed tobacco tourism which uses France either as a destination or as a route. |
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Then burn equal parts of cavendish tobacco and old shoeleather in an iron vessel till charred. |
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The tobacco chawer is wiping his neck with a wet bandanna, his legs dangling off the bed of his vehicle. |
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The first time he chewed tobacco, he swallowed his chew and got extremely sick. |
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Has been a tobacco chewer thirty-eight years, and a portion of the time to great excess. |
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The embrace disconcerted the daughter-in-law somewhat, as the caresses of old gentlemen unshorn and perfumed with tobacco might well do. |
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That morning on which Mr. Neville was starting I saw Jim standing by my wagon and cutting up tobacco on the disselboom. |
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From it he pinched a smidgen of snuff and packed the tobacco into his dudeen, a terrible habit for a young man to possess. |
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He thought for a moment as he deftly rolled the paper and tobacco into a durry, licked the edge and stuck it down. |
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Grandpa sat on the front porch, hawking and wheezing, as he packed his pipe with cheap tobacco. |
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Until the American War of Independence in 1776, Glasgow was the world's premier tobacco port, dominating world trade. |
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Europeans brought cattle, horses, and sheep to the New World, and from the New World Europeans received tobacco, potatoes and maize. |
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The chief export products of the island are dates, ghee, tobacco, and fish. |
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Hardest hit were farm commodities such as wheat, cotton, tobacco, and lumber. |
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The pirate's characteristic loot included various ships' cargo like slaves or tobacco. |
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However, European demand for tobacco fueled the arrival of more settlers and servants. |
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Crops such like coffee, tea, cacao, tobacco and rubber were all introduced by the Dutch. |
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Today Indonesia is not only the oldest industrial producer of tobacco, but also the second largest consumer of tobacco. |
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The merchants dealing in this lucrative business became the wealthy tobacco lords, who dominated the city for most of the eighteenth century. |
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Bristol's economy has been built on maritime trade, including the import of tobacco and the slave trade. |
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Excise duties are charged on, amongst other things, motor fuel, alcohol, tobacco, betting and vehicles. |
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Bernal's Lab at Birkbeck College with the tobacco mosaic virus extending ideas on helical construction. |
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Until 1800 Malta depended on cotton, tobacco and its shipyards for exports. |
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Some of the prisoners were reportedly despondent, but others were nonchalant, even smoking tobacco. |
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In a small number of dances for one or two people, steps are near and across a pair of clay tobacco pipes laid one across the other on the floor. |
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Taking the glove, he goes to see Alice at her father's tobacco shop, but she is too distraught to speak. |
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The traders would then sail to the Caribbean to sell the slaves, and return to Europe with goods such as sugar, tobacco and cocoa. |
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At the time, Glasgow held a commercial importance as the city participated in the trade of sugar, tobacco and later cotton. |
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The Bermuda cedar boxes used to ship tobacco to England were reportedly worth more than their contents. |
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The taxes would be implemented on goods that harm the human body for example fast food, tobacco products, and soft drinks. |
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If tobacco were banned we would have 13 million people desperately craving a drug that they would not be able to get. |
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Identification indicating age is commonly required to purchase alcohol and tobacco and to enter nightclubs and gambling venues. |
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Overseas driver's licenses may not be sufficient for the purchase of alcohol and tobacco. |
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Both the federal and state governments levy excise taxes on goods such as alcohol, motor fuel, and tobacco products. |
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Taxation constitutes a substantial proportion of the retail prices on alcohol and tobacco products. |
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Similarly, there is an important number of French purchasers buying tobacco and alcohol in Spanish border towns such as Le Perthus. |
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These restrictions often apply to tobacco, wine, spirits, cosmetics, gifts and souvenirs. |
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It began with trade with Colonial America, first in tobacco and then rum, sugar and cotton. |
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I am a misocapnist, particularly when someone is using stinky tobacco with nepheligenous results. |
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Those who worked in the indigo, tobacco, and rice fields in the South came from mainly western and central Africa. |
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The Southern colonies in particular relied on cash crops such as tobacco and cotton. |
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The plantations grew tobacco, indigo and rice for export, and raised most of their own food supplies. |
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The English merchants simply sold American tobacco in Europe and took a commission. |
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Chronic nicotinism is usually experienced by those who smoke cigars, and by cigarmakers who are continually handling tobacco. |
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Growth was rapid after 1700, as Scottish ports, especially those on the Clyde, began to import tobacco from the American colonies. |
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The tobacco plant readily absorbs and accumulates heavy metals, such as copper from the surrounding soil into its leaves. |
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After the European exploration and conquest of the Americas, the practice of smoking tobacco quickly spread to the rest of the world. |
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The smoking of tobacco, as well as various hallucinogenic drugs, was used to achieve trances and to come into contact with the spirit world. |
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In 1612, six years after the settlement of Jamestown, John Rolfe was credited as the first settler to successfully raise tobacco as a cash crop. |
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In order to meet demands from the old world, tobacco was grown in succession, quickly depleting the land. |
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This became a motivator to settle west into the unknown continent, and likewise an expansion of tobacco production. |
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Like tea, coffee and opium, tobacco was just one of many intoxicants that was originally used as a form of medicine. |
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Soon after its introduction to the Old World, tobacco came under frequent criticism from state and religious leaders. |
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This compounded with a change in demand, lead to the industrialization of tobacco production with the cigarette. |
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Today Russia leads as the top consumer of tobacco followed by Indonesia, Laos, Ukraine, Belarus, Greece, Jordan, and China. |
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There are many different tobacco cultivars which are made into a wide variety of mixtures and brands. |
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Most of these substances are controlled, and some are considerably more intoxicating than either tobacco or cannabis. |
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Whether tobacco, cannabis, opium or herbs, some form of receptacle is required along with a source of fire to light the mixture. |
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The seven most important carcinogens in tobacco smoke are shown in the table, along with DNA alterations they cause. |
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Education and counselling by physicians of children and adolescents has been found to be effective in decreasing the risk of tobacco use. |
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The importance of tobacco to soldiers was early on recognized as something that could not be ignored by commanders. |
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It was asserted that regular use of tobacco while under duress would not only calm the soldiers but allow them to withstand greater hardship. |
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The painters of the Dutch Golden Age were among the first to paint portraits of people smoking and still lifes of pipes and tobacco. |
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He also began manufacturing clay tobacco pipes, many of which were exported to Ireland. |
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Gangs such as The Aldington Gang brought spirits, tobacco and salt to the county, and transported goods such as wool across the sea to France. |
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Economically, it makes sense for people to buy their supplies of wine, beer, spirits, and tobacco in bulk in France instead of Britain. |
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The law is designed to prevent French citizens buying tobacco in Belgium and Luxembourg. |
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Following recent tax increases in France it has become more attractive for French citizens to buy tobacco in Belgium and Luxembourg. |
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Also, it was the Greek agriculturists and farmers that first systematically and with scientific planning, cultivated cotton and tobacco. |
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They improved the quantity and quality of production and dominated cotton and tobacco exports. |
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Other famous New World crops include the cashew, cocoa, rubber, sunflower, tobacco, and vanilla, and fruits like the guava, papaya and pineapple. |
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At the time, due to high UK taxation on liquors such as brandy, and on tobacco, etc. |
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Sources of nicotine other than tobacco and sources of cocaine in the Old World are discussed by the British biologist Duncan Edlin. |
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Slaves were driven much harder than when they had been in growing tobacco or wheat back east. |
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These now exist alongside the city's older industries of the docks, grain milling and tobacco processing. |
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After selling the slaves, the ships returned to Britain loaded with sugar and tobacco, completing the Triangular trade. |
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Handling cigarettes and other infected tobacco products can transmit the virus to tomato plants. |
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People living in the area grow sugar beet, sunflowers, wheat, maize, tobacco, wine grapes and fruit. |
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Rather, slave labor was used for coffee, tobacco and even grains such as rice. |
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Therefore demand for tobacco grew in the course of the cultural exchanges and increased contacts among peoples. |
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Smoking of opium came on the heels of tobacco smoking and may have been encouraged by a brief ban on the smoking of tobacco by the Ming emperor. |
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Spain began to sell opium, along with New World products such as tobacco and maize, to the Chinese in order to prevent a trade deficit. |
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The country is one of the world's last planned economies and its economy is dominated by the exports of sugar, tobacco, coffee and skilled labor. |
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Cuba's natural resources include sugar, tobacco, fish, citrus fruits, coffee, beans, rice, potatoes, and livestock. |
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Other important crops that originated from the Andes are tobacco and potatoes. |
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In 1765 the crown created a monopoly on tobacco, which directly affected agriculture and manufacturing the Veracruz region. |
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The Europeans had arrived to trade, not only guns, but also soap, tobacco and other goods unknown in medieval Japan, for the Japanese goods. |
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Major agricultural outputs of the state are tobacco, poultry, cotton, cattle, dairy products, soybeans, hay, rice, and swine. |
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By 1612, Rolfe's new strains of tobacco had been successfully cultivated and exported, establishing a first cash crop for export. |
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Disease, poor harvests and the growing demand for tobacco lands caused hostilities to escalate. |
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Planters would then fill large hogsheads with tobacco and convey them to inspection warehouses. |
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Tobacco is a product prepared from the leaves of the tobacco plant by curing them. |
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Dried tobacco leaves are mainly used for smoking in cigarettes, cigars, pipe tobacco, and flavored shisha tobacco. |
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They can also be consumed as snuff, chewing tobacco, dipping tobacco and snus. |
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In 2008, the World Health Organization named tobacco as the world's single greatest preventable cause of death. |
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Following the arrival of the Europeans to the Americas, tobacco became increasingly popular as a trade item. |
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Before the development of lighter Virginia and white burley strains of tobacco, the smoke was too harsh to be inhaled. |
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The convention is designed to push for effective legislation and its enforcement in all countries to reduce the harmful effects of tobacco. |
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Today, tobacco is sown in cold frames or hotbeds, as their germination is activated by light. |
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A hole is created in the tilled earth with a tobacco peg, either a curved wooden tool or deer antler. |
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In the oldest method still used today, the entire plant is harvested at once by cutting off the stalk at the ground with a tobacco knife. |
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In the 19th century, bright tobacco began to be harvested by pulling individual leaves off the stalk as they ripened. |
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Topping always refers to the removal of the tobacco flower before the leaves are systematically removed, and eventually, entirely harvested. |
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Curing and subsequent aging allow for the slow oxidation and degradation of carotenoids in tobacco leaf. |
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Inhalation of these AGEs in tobacco smoke contributes to atherosclerosis and cancer. |
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China's increase in tobacco production was the single biggest factor in the increase in world production. |
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This growth can be partially explained by the existence of a high import tariff on foreign tobacco entering China. |
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India has 96,865 registered tobacco farmers and many more who are not registered. |
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In 2010, 3,120 tobacco product manufacturing facilities were operating in all of India. |
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Since 1947, the Indian government has supported growth in the tobacco industry. |
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India has seven tobacco research centers, located in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Bihar, Mysore, West Bengal, and Rajamundry. |
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In Brazil, around 135,000 family farmers cite tobacco production as their main economic activity. |
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Rolling paper supplier Zig-Zag is set to launch one of the cheekiest tobacco products in years with its new Rasta rolling tobacco. |
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We also saw an increase in sales of rolling paper last year, although this is not reflected in our sales of rolling tobacco. |
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The campaign also tackles common misconceptions around handrolled tobacco, or rollups. |
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Smoking of cigarette particularly beedis and chewing tobacco is an age-old practice in India. |
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Due to this, he said, the beedi market is now taken over by chewing tobacco that, according to him may be equally harmful for public health. |
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Betel nut with betel leaf chewing is possibly the biggest addiction in Bangladesh, more so than tobacco. |
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The FDA today ordered the withdrawal of four tobacco products that it found were not substantially equivalent to existing products. |
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The health effects section addresses a variety of tobacco products, including smokeless tobacco, bidis, clove cigarettes, and hookah pipes. |
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Known as Black Mamba, the artificial cannabis cannot be picked up by routine drug tests and is easily passed off as rolling tobacco. |
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The club will be given a Middle Eastern vibe with belly dancers, jugglers, masseurs and fruit flavoured shisha tobacco pipes. |
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A swirl of tobacco, mocha, and vanilla leads to dark plum and briary berries, with solid and elegant structure. |
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Oil-soluble dye in larval diet for tagging moths, eggs, and spermatophores of tobacco budworms. |
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The bacteria produce a protein that is toxic when ingested by certain lepidopteran insects such as European corn borers and tobacco budworms. |
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The Bunde plant dates back to 1881 and currently serves both the confectionery and tobacco markets. |
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Cats have served as expert sales-creatures of everything from pet food to whiskey and tobacco. Be it in print or on television, they are undeniably purrsuasive. |
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Rethink believes that following the impact of tobacco warnings on cigarette packets, rolling paper packets should carry warnings about the mental health effects of cannabis. |
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The pack also has the capacity to hold three replaceable flavor cartridges, and comes with a choice of tobacco, menthol or a variety pack of flavors. |
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Environmentalists are calling for the ban of menthyl bromide which has traditionally been used by tobacco farmers to kill weeds and prevent diseases that affect the crop. |
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In its wake came three breweries, 70 pubs, and its own tobacco industry that survived well into the second half of the last century under the Brython brand. |
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A number of the town's businesses could face prosecution after 5,000 cigarettes and enough hand rolling tobacco for 1,600 roll-ups were confiscated. |
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Having been one of the people to popularise tobacco smoking in England, he left a small tobacco pouch, found in his cell shortly after his execution. |
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I had warmed under the smiling gaze of this military young woman who wore her small lifeboat hat and smoked her ration of tobacco, though she always refused coffee. |
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As Hemantiya sits in the verandah of the house with tobacco leaf, thread and scissors in the tray, Vineeta joins her in the grueling process of rolling the beedis. |
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Before this, the mainstay of the infant colony's economy was the growth export of tobacco, but tobacco prices eventually fell in the 1630s, as Chesapeake production expanded. |
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Notable plants that were domesticated in North America include tobacco, maize, squash, tomato, sunflower, blueberry, avocado, cotton, chile pepper and vanilla. |
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These newly freed servants were rarely able to support themselves comfortably, and the tobacco industry was increasingly dominated by large planters. |
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Some or all forms of tobacco advertising are banned in many countries. |
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Tobacco advertising of tobacco products by the tobacco industry is through a variety of media, including sponsorship, particularly of sporting events. |
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Smoking of tobacco is practised worldwide by over one billion people. |
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Bhutan is the only country in the world where tobacco sales are illegal. |
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Several tobacco plants have been used as model organisms in genetics. |
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