Smoking originally started in the 15th century. It was invented by locals of the Bahamas. They did not draw cigarettes, they had pipes. One end of the pipe is filled with burning cigarette leaves and the other end of the pipe is where the smoke is sucked. Today, many people around the world have acquired this habit. There are about 1 billion smokers in the world. This custom is very addictive as all tobacco contain substances called nicotine.
Smoking is to smoke and smoke cigarette smoke (which consists of particles and gas). (A broader definition may include tobacco smoke sucking into the mouth and then releasing it, as some people use pipes and cigars.) In the latter half of the 17th century in the United States, European settlers introduced tobacco to Eurasia and followed a general trade route. This approach has been criticized since it first entered the Western world, but before the introduction of the automatic cigarette device it had spread before several sectors of many societies.
Smoking and tobacco prevention lovers by the US Environmental Protection Agency are among the hottest controversies in our time. Many people know that cigarette smoke is awkward, smelly, mere dirty, uncomfortable. Several smokers themselves agree to this view. Not to mention attacks on smokers and compulsion of tobacco companies, today's smoking regulation can not be designed simply because tobacco smoke is unpleasant. Another reason is necessary. - Impact of secondhand smoke You know that 3,000 nonsmokers in the US died of lung cancer this year. Those deaths are totally preventable. Their lung cancer is caused by passive smoking. Secondhand smoke is the smoke they smoke from other people's cigarettes. It is also known as involuntary smoking or passive smoking. But the impact of this smoke is not passive. This is fatal and dangerous
Tobacco smoke accounts for one-third of cancer deaths. The first signs of the risk of tobacco smoke are coming from the emergence of lung cancer as the main disease. Lung cancer was one of the most rare types of cancer before the 20th century and only 140 cases were reported worldwide in the medical literature by 1898. Until the 1920s, physicians still believed that they had no chance to see lung cancer patients, so they were still obliged to observe cases that occurred! Today, lung cancer is one of the most common cancers and has more deaths than any other type