سگار
Cigar; a cylindrical roll of dried and fermented tobacco leaves designed for smoking. سگار (sigaar) is the Urdu noun for cigar, derived from the English "cigar", which itself comes from the Spanish "cigarro". This word is used in contexts related to smoking, tobacco products, luxury goods, and sometimes as a symbol of status or relaxation. In South Asian culture, cigars are less common than cigarettes (سگریٹ, cigarette) and are often associated with wealth, celebration (e.g., birth of a child), or old fashioned masculinity. The polarity is negative from a health perspective (cigars cause cancer and other diseases), but neutral in descriptive contexts. The opposite concepts would be "سگریٹ" (cigarette), "بیدی" (beedi), "حقہ" (hookah), or "تمباکو" (tobacco). The word is grammatically masculine.