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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 01/10/2018 (2835 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Do you know your ABCs — of cannabis?
We recognize that not everyone has partaken in pot or listens to Snoop Dogg. And so, ahead of legalization on Oct. 17, we’ve compiled an A-to-Z glossary of basic (and not-so-basic) cannabis-related terms. A Weed Alphabet, if you will. Think “doobie, doobie, doobie starts with D,” although to be very clear, this particular alphabet is not for children.
A is for Asparagus (But Not Those Kind Of Asparagus!)
Listen: there are a lot of slang terms for cannabis — more than 1,200, in fact. While weed, pot and marijuana are probably the most recognizable, there’s also a whole vegetable-related subcategory that includes ‘asparagus,’ ‘broccoli’ and, if you don’t actually partake, ‘the devil’s lettuce.’ A Facebook troll for Manitoba-specific slang came up empty, save for one person who helpfully suggested “Burton’s arugula.”
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
The bowl is where pot is held in a bong.
B is for Bowl
This is the part of a pipe or bong that holds the cannabis.
C is for CBD
CBD, or cannabidiol, is a cannabinoid — a chemical compound produced by the cannabis plant. Cannabinoids interact with different cannabinoid receptors in the human nervous system. CBD is a non-intoxicating compound, meaning it will not produce a high, but is said to have therapeutic benefits, which is why it’s having a bit of a moment in the wellness scene.
D is for Doobie
Mostly antiquated slang for a hand-rolled cannabis cigarette. The term was used by hippies in the 1970s, now it’s mostly used by narcs. Weed slang is kind of like social media: promptly abandoned once uncool adults start using it. D is also for ‘dank krippy,’ a slang term that sounds like it was coined by the federal government because it was.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Read the label before eating cannabis ‘edibles,’ often stronger than smoked.
E is for Edible
Most people automatically think of “special brownies” when they hear this term, but edibles — food or drink containing cannabis — can come in many forms. Read the label carefully and be mindful of how much you’re eating; while the effect takes a little longer to kick in, cannabis consumed this way tends to be stronger. Canadian adults can legally make their own edibles after Oct. 17, but they won’t be for sale until sometime in 2019.
DON RYAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Female marijuana plants produce flowers.
F is for Flower
Cannabis plants are male, female, or both. Female plants produce flowers (a.k.a. buds), and the most potent flowers come from unfertilized female plants called sinsemilla.
G is for Gateway
Generations of junior high school kids were taught that weed is a “gateway drug,” or a drug that would set one on a path to harder drug use. However, researchers have concluded that there’s a lack of hard evidence to support this hypothesis. Some modern studies suggest that cannabis could act as an anti-gateway drug, to help ease opioid withdrawal, but this hasn’t been proven.
H is for Hemp
By now, you’ve learned that not all parts of the cannabis plant are intoxicating. Though the packaging might bear a telltale leaf, your hemp body butter won’t get you high. Nor will those hemp hearts you sprinkle on your salad. Hemp is a variety of cannabis and can be refined into a host of products, including food, beauty products and textiles.
I is for Indica
Along with cannabis sativa, cannabis indica is the other dominant variety of cannabis. They differ in appearance — sativa is tall and thin while indica is short and bushy — and are said to produce different highs, but research suggests that may not be the case.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
A joint: a cannabis cigarette.
J is for Joint
Or jay. Or spliff. Or fatty (depending on its, girth). These are all words for cannabis cigarettes. A blunt, however, is a hollowed-out cigar filled with cannabis.
K is for Kush
Now, let us (lettuce?) venture into the world of strains. Cannabis growers breed plants for certain traits, and name them accordingly. Kush is a term often applied to cannabis indica. (Kush is also the name of a Winnipeg graffiti artist, in case you were wondering what all those ‘Kush for mayor’ signs are all about.)
L is for Legalization
Canadian adults can legally smoke ‘em if they’ve got ‘em as of Oct. 17, 2018 — provided they follow all their respective provincial rules and regulations, that is.
M is for Munchies
There is truth in the well-worn stereotype: cannabis, famously, is an appetite stimulator, which you probably know if you’ve ever, like, seen a movie. No one craves broccoli after blazing some broccoli, though. The munchies are all about the salt, sugar and fat.
Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press
Nugs of marijuana.
N is for Nug
A nug, or nugget, is a piece of the cannabis bud that have been dried and cured. Some use the word “nug” to describe high-quality cannabis. #nuglife
O is for Oil
Cannabis oils are extracted from cannabis plants. CBD oil is said to help treat everything from anxiety to sleep problems to inflammation.
P is for Paraphernalia
Think bongs, pipes, one-hitters (a small pipe), vaporizers, rolling papers, grinders, “stash” boxes, or anything else you might find at your local head shop. Head shops have existed in a legal grey area, which is why many claim their products are for “tobacco use only” — Bob Marley iconography notwithstanding.
Q is for… actually, there is no Q.
R is for Roach
Now we’re getting, er, granular. A ‘roach’ is the butt of a joint, too small to smoke without a roach clip (see also: Paraphernalia). Several roaches can be rolled into a joint. Roaches are said to be stronger because they are more concentrated.
RICHARD VOGEL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
A stoner is someone who gets stoned regularly.
S is for Stoner
Slang for someone who gets stoned, or high, usually with regularity. Some cannabis activists have argued that the term is pejorative, tantamount to calling someone who imbibes in alcohol a “drunkard.” To that end, S is also for ‘Stereotype.’ Or ‘Spicoli.’
T is for THC
KENT PORTER / THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Jayden's Juice is a THC tincture.
An abbreviation for tetrahydrocannabinol, this is main psychoactive compound in cannabis — or, the cannabinoid that gets you high.
U is for Underage
After legalization, you must be 19 years old to use cannabis in Manitoba. People under 19 who get busted with cannabis will face a $672 fine. Supplying cannabis to an underage person is a $2,542 fine.
V is for Vape
Vaping is an alternative to smoking cannabis and, much like e-cigarettes, is increasing in popularity. What’s the difference? Basically, vaping heats the chemicals in cannabis without combusting them, producing vapour as opposed to smoke. While this is an emerging area of research, vaping is said to be less harmful than smoking.
W is for Weed
Weed is arguably the most popular term for cannabis right now, which, as a Slate article posits, might be generational: “In the 1990s, a new generation of users wanted to distance themselves from their parents’ dope or pot.” Meanwhile, many have suggested we should ditch using the term marijuana due to its racist roots, arguing American prohibitionists used the term to villify Mexican immigrants.
X is for ‘X marks the spot’
Although cannabis will be legal come Oct. 17, where you can consume it legally is a different story. Manitobans will not be able to smoke or vape cannabis in public spaces, including sidewalks, parking lots, parks, playgrounds, beaches and pools, outdoor fields or sports venues, educational facilities and patios or decks attached to restaurants. So, your property. You can smoke weed in and on your property.
Y is for “Your life can change in an instant.”
This is the tagline for the federal government’s Don’t Drive High campaign. Per Manitoba Public Insurance: “all drivers suspected by police of being under the influence of any drug can receive an immediate 24-hour roadside licence suspension.”
Z is for Zig-Zag
The Kleenex of rolling papers in terms of brand recognition, Zig-Zag was founded in France in 1855.
jen.zoratti@freepress.mb.ca
Twitter: @JenZoratti
Jen Zoratti Columnist
Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen.
Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
Jen Zoratti Columnist
Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen.
Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
BRANDON -- The City of Brandon has declared a state of local emergency as officials prepare for forecasted flooding along the Assiniboine and Shellmouth river basins and continued increases in river levels.
The council voted unanimously during a special meeting Saturday evening to support the recommendation of the city’s Emergency Manager, Tobin Praznik, and Director of Engineering, Kyle Winters, following updated provincial flood forecasts showing continued increases in expected river levels.
The city's mayor, Jeff Fawcett, said the move is a proactive measure to protect residents, critical infrastructure and property.
“The declaration should not alarm residents … it is intended to ensure the city is prepared well before the river reaches its expected peak around July 12,” he told the Sun.
Prolific Winnipeg director and performer Rob Herriot has died.
Herriot was well known for his work within opera and musical theatre in Winnipeg and across North America. He died Friday at 60 years old. Loved ones described his death as sudden, and the cause had not yet been determined Sunday.
“He was such an enormous part of the opera community locally here in Winnipeg… as a director, he was shaping a generation of young artists in the community,” Manitoba Opera executive director Michael Blais said Sunday. “I think that’s what the real loss is to the opera community, in that way.”
Herriot’s work in Manitoba included directing productions of Cosí fan Tutte, Madama Butterfly, La Bohème, Carmen, and, most recently, The Marriage of Figaro for Manitoba Opera, Cinderella, The Wizard of Oz and Beauty and the Beast for Rainbow Stage, and Three Decembers, The Walk from the Garden and The House Without a Christmas Tree for the Little Opera Company.
The City of Winnipeg says the claims made by the owner of the Manwin Hotel, in a lawsuit filed after the dilapidated Main Street property was destroyed by fire this year, are baseless.
Lawyers for the city have filed papers that seek to have the suit by Akim Kambamba thrown out.
The suit, filed in the Court of King’s Bench in the spring, seeks $15 million, plus court costs, over the Jan. 14 fire in the vacant hotel at 655 Main St., which has since been demolished.
The company accused the city of breaching its duty to it and wrongfully evicting the tenants, who had been ordered out owing to numerous safety concerns last year.
HAMILTON — You would think Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift would’ve looked at the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ schedule before locking in a date for their wedding.
The Kansas City Chiefs tight end and the global music icon tied the knot Friday at New York’s Madison Square Garden in front of a star-studded guest list.
Bombers quarterback Zach Collaros — who was teammates with Kelce during their time at the University of Cincinnati — was invited but had to miss the occasion to prepare for Sunday’s road clash against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (6 p.m. CT).
“I told him that! I talked to him the other day,” said Collaros shortly after arriving in Hamilton on Saturday. “They were taking a walk together and I’m like ‘You guys could’ve taken a look at the damn schedule.’ But yeah, it is what it is.”
Free Press staff3 minute readUpdated: 10:07 AM CDT
Another round of wild weather brought tornado warnings, heavy rain, hail and power outages for more than 6,000 Manitoba Hydro customers Sunday night and Monday morning.
Tornado warnings were issued for some areas, including Souris, Wawanesa and Peguis First Nation, as severe thunderstorms rolled through southern and western Manitoba.
A severe thunderstorm watch was in effect for parts of southern and eastern Manitoba, including Winnipeg, as of 8:45 a.m. Monday.
Manitoba Hydro said crews worked overnight to restore power to customers after strong winds downed poles and power lines. Outages were still widespread Monday morning.
Morgan Modjeski4 minute readSaturday, Jul. 4, 2026
The father of a 25-year-old woman who died after being found unresponsive in a cell at the Winnipeg Remand Centre has unanswered questions about what led to her in-custody death.