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Crossword clues for dottle

Wiktionary
dottle

n. 1 A plug or tap of a vessel. 2 A small rounded lump or mass. 3 The still burning or wholly burnt tobacco plug in a pipe. 4 (context Geordie English) A baby's dummy, pacifier.

WordNet
dottle

n. the residue of partially burnt tobacco left caked in the bowl of a pipe after smoking

Wikipedia
Dottle

Dottle is the remaining plug of unburnt tobacco and ashes left in the bottom of a tobacco pipe when it has been smoked.

Usage examples of "dottle".

The little man took out a pipe from his pocket, and a small penknife, and began to remove the dottle from the bowl.

Sherlock Holmes was, as I expected, lounging about his sittingroom in his dressing-gown, reading the agony column of The Times and smoking his before-breakfast pipe, which was composed of all the plugs and dottles left from his smokes of the day before, all carefully dried and collected on the corner of the mantelpiece.

Farther down, Sibbi bending like an Egyptian over a bowl of osiers and sun-mummified flowers, Sibbi with her magical face and her bright shallow brain, and her husband Arthur, a bear, at the eternal business of his pipe, knocking out dottle, refilling it, that rank black tobacco odour woven by now into the scalding incense of every room.

Sir Ehdt Gahthwahlt, Confederation siegemaster, tapped the dottle from his pipe, picked up his winecup, then set it back, untasted.

We petted and soothed the dottles to pass the time, while their fat fannies wagged in doggy happiness and their tails flailed the air like hairy windmills.

Then he peaceably tapped out the dottle of his meerschaum, refilled it from a twist of coarse paper, and lit it with a German tinder-box.

Unlike the sad dottles, our two lovelies were not tied and seemed in no way to be unhappy.

Three Oaths Tsun said, knocking out the dottle of his pipe on the outside of the rail.

He tapped out his pipe and ground the dottle into the courtyard paving stone under his boot heel.

A reason for the limited size of our party was that, though forage was kept in readiness at the keep, it was only enough for a hundred dottles at a single entry.

So finally, noble sirs, if this be sooth—then, in the matter of the dottles and the night, what, indeed, is one more broken shibboleth?