you start smoking for many reasons. your family smoke, your friends smoke, or you smoke because of pier pressure. sometimes people smoke when they are high as they do not know what they are doing. nicotine is the part of the ciggeratte that you become addicted to, but nicotine is not the worst thing for you, it is the other things in the ciggerette. you should really not smoke as you can get many types of cancers and illnesses from somoking. THIS IS A WARNING FROM THE NHS
they will be the death of you
The smoke gets in your lungs and kills them, basically.
He might be.
when non smokers breathe the smoke of cigars it is called second - hand smoking. That's how they get affected which ends up inviting non smokers to smoke.
Non-smokers are affected by the smoke that is given off when the smokers, smoke. It's called second hand smoke and it's as dangerous (or even more) than juts regularly smoking.
Mainstream Smoke
Depends, some bad smokers smoke, 2-5 packs a day, and regular smokers, smoke around 1 pack a day, and people quitting smoke around 3 to 5 ciggaretts a day.
Smokers.
People around smokers are often referred to as "passive smokers" or "secondhand smokers." These individuals are exposed to the smoke inhaled by the smoker, which can have harmful health effects. Additionally, the term "environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)" is used to describe the combination of smoke from the burning end of a cigarette and the smoke exhaled by the smoker.
Secondary smoke is cigarette smoke non-smokers inhale from nearby smokers. See http://www.answers.com/topic/tobacco-smoking for more details.
no because smoking can spread to all around the place and if talking about non-smokers with smoke zones,non smokers can get asthma and other diseases
Nicotine-out filters for cigarettes are designed to reduce nicotine intake, but they do not eliminate the harmful substances in cigarette smoke that contribute to COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease). While these filters might lower nicotine dependency, they do not address the damage caused by other toxic chemicals and particulates in tobacco smoke. For COPD smokers, the best course of action is to quit smoking entirely and seek medical advice for effective cessation strategies and management of their condition.