The term Flow Stogie originates from the word stogie, which is slang for cigar.
This term itself is another word for tampon.
How this term was conceived was through noticing that a tampon looks awfully much like a cigar, though white in color.
Another reason for this nickname was developed, as the blood of a used tampon can be the lit end of a cigar. Tis quite disgusting, yet so funny.
The phrase is fun to say, and most of the time, majority of the people you say it around will have no clue what it means, and thats when you let them in.
Behold: the Flow Stogie.
Guy #1: My chick is on the rag right now.
Guy #2: Bummer. She on those Flow Stogies?
Guy #1: What in the hell is a Flow Stogie?
Guy #2: A tampon.
Guy #1: Kinda nast...
Guy #2: Yeah, Kinda...
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smoking the end of a large cigar impaled on a needle or pin so you dont burn your fingers.
at a glance it seems the stogie end is floating.
that guy really likes his cigar. he's floatin the stogie.
he looked all gansta untill he started floatin a stogie.
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Another name for a penis, dick, cock, or johnson.
Hey dogg how would you like to smoke this big ol' meat stogie.
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It's when someone finds a used cigarette and smokes it, issa habit used by lots of junkies or extreme cheapskates
"if you ever feening just go walk over to my neighbors yard they always throwing they stogies in they yard"
"Dude the back of the movie theaters have a jack pot of stogies by the dumpsters"
formerly known as a cheap, thin cigar; a cigarette
could i bum a stogie? i havent smoked all day
The definition of “stogie” is rooted deeply in the history of cigars in the United States. It’s derived from Conestoga, Pennsylvania, where the Amish have been growing tobacco the same way for over 300 years in Lancaster County, and – of equal significance – where the first Conestoga wagons were manufactured. The word “stogie” enjoyed multiple meanings during America’s frontier days. The wagon drivers were called “stogies,” as were the durable shoes they wore. Eventually, the term was applied to the long, thin, and rugged cigars many wagon drivers smoked. The strong and distinctive cigars were mostly rolled from Pennsylvania tobaccos. Though far fewer tobacco crops are grown in Pennsylvania today than centuries ago, Pennsylvania Broadleaf tobacco is still harvested there, and cigar-makers continue to blend with this unique tobacco. Although the expansion of the railroad rendered Conestoga wagons obsolete in much of the country by the late 1800s, we still call cigars “stogies.”
Modern Use of the Term
Because the cigars the pioneers smoked on their Conestoga wagons were of a fairly rough and rudimentary nature, “stogie” has commonly been used as a reference for cheroots, or cheap cigars that are opened on both ends, like those made by Henry Clay, De Nobili Toscani, and Backwoods. Today, however, cigar lovers apply the term broadly to all cigars, including premium handmade brands you know and love, as well as good cheap cigars.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's favorite Cigars! He can smoke it anywhere he wants because he's a Stud and he's Ballsy
"I can smoke my stogies anywhere I want, I don't have to hide in a place, like you! Hohoho" Arnold "the ballsy" Schwarzenegger