Puff

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tufguy

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What would you say? Suppose a person is smoking and he hasn't taken a puff for a while so what we have to say? "Take a puff otherwise the cigerrate will subside(the fire of cigerrate will subside)".
 
You could say "Take a puff or the cigarette will go out".
 
A cigar would go out, but a cigarette wouldn't.
 
Cigarettes go out if they are not smoked.
 
I have never smoked in my life and I'm definitely not going to. But I'm interested what "take a puff" means. Is it like "to inhale smoke" or what?
 
I get most of my cigarettes outside of New York due to the expense. They all go out if not smoked.
 
Why not? (But it's usually take a puff OF something. The word "drag" is also used.)
 
I am an asthmatic. May I say 'take a puff at a Salbutamol inhaler'?

In fact, inhaler prescriptions direct the patient, e.g., "take one puff by mouth twice a day."
 
The prescriptions are in Chinese, so I wondered whether 'take a puff' applied to inhalers.
 
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To me, a 'puff' is an exhalation, not an inhalation.

When I 'puff', I'm pushing air out. I don't smoke cigarettes, but I do smoke a couple of cigars a year, as well as the occasional pipe and when I puff, I'm expelling smoke.

When I'm pulling air in, I refer to it as a 'draw' or a 'pull'.
 
The following is the photo GoesStation wanted to show me in the above deleted post.

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The "puff" in that instruction refers to what the inhaler does when you press the button. It "puffs" out an amount of medication and the user inhales it.
 
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