Roger
intj, name, noun, verb, slang ·Common ·Middle school level
Definitions
- 1 An act of sexual intercourse. UK, slang, vulgar
"ALAN: Lynn, if I have to put back my roger with Sonja one more time, I'll be fit to burst."
- 2 radiotelephony clear-code word for the letter R.
- 1 To acknowledge by saying "roger". transitive
"The Explorer radio operator rogered receipt of the War Room's signal."
- 2 Of a man, to have sexual intercourse with (someone), especially in a rough manner. UK, slang, transitive, vulgar
- 3 To have sexual intercourse. UK, intransitive, slang, vulgar
- 1 Received (used in radio communications to acknowledge that a message has been received and understood)
"Pilot: CESSNA TWO THREE FOUR—ROGER—OUT."
- 1 A male given name from the Germanic languages.
"By her I claim the kingdom: she was heir / To Roger, Earl of March, who was the son / Of Edmund Mortimer."
- 2 A surname originating as a patronymic.
- 3 The Devil; Satan. dialectal, obsolete
- 4 Jolly Roger (pirate flag)
"The escaped convicts who had captured the Arrow even ran up the “Roger,” the black flag with the white skull […]"
Example
More examples"Roger works from morning till night."
Etymology
From Roger, used circa 1940 in UK and US military communication to represent "R" when spelling out a word. "R" is the first letter in received, used to acknowledge understanding a message. "Roger" for "received" was in spoken usage in air traffic radio parlance by 1950.
Possibly from Old High German Hrotger via Shelta roger.
From Old French Rogier, from the Frankish equivalent of Old English Hrōþgār (see Hroðgar), from Proto-Germanic *Hrōþigaizaz (“fame-spear”). Compare also Rutger.
Related phrases
More for "roger"
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.