Also chiboque, chibbook. [a. Turkish chibūk, lit. small stick, also tube of the pipe; the pipe itself. The spelling chibouque is French.] The long tobacco-pipe used by the Turks. Hence Chiboukchy, chibouquejee (Turkish), pipe-bearer.

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  1813.  Byron, Corsair, II. ii. The long chibouque’s dissolving cloud.

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1839.  J. Stephen, Trav. Turkey, 38/1. I … lolled half an hour on a divan, with chibouk and coffee.

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1847.  Disraeli, Tancred, 17. He had only taken a preliminary puff of his chibouque.

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1872.  Baker, Nile Tribut., vii. 105. The long ‘chibbook’ of the Turk.

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1877.  Amelia B. Edwards, Up Nile, i. 10. The sponge-merchant smokes his long chibouk in a bower of sponges.

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  1834.  Morier, Ayesha (1846), 66. The end of the room was crowded with chiboukchies or pipe-men.

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1869.  W. H. Russell, Diary in the East, I. 224–5. The Prince and Princess started … with a preceding and surrounding of chibouquejees, syces, guides, cavasses, dragomans.

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