Associations to the word «Rogers»
Noun
- Boyle
- Shrewsbury
- Peterson
- Ritchie
- Acton
- Dodger
- Ludlow
- Patty
- Chuckle
- Chief
- Bree
- Hawkins
- Chapman
- Grimes
- Manners
- Thorpe
- Def
- Chronicler
- Antagonist
- Mcdowell
- Verdi
- Keyboardist
- Gardiner
- Salisbury
- Eileen
- Craig
- Stan
- Davies
- Elton
- Frey
- Poole
- Bassist
- Taylor
- Critic
- Harmonica
- Erickson
- Hewitt
- Durham
- Widow
- Homer
- Milwaukee
- Welles
- Bart
- Missouri
- Julian
- Woodward
- Encyclopedia
- Mckenzie
- Donnell
- Whisper
- Isabella
- Orton
- Contributor
- Norman
- Mimi
- Six
- Gilles
- Miller
- Heiress
- Slam
- Blunt
- Crosby
- Sergei
- Sensor
- Foreword
- Catholic
- Pete
- Drummer
- Beard
- Freddie
- Monitoring
- Alain
- Henri
- Palermo
- Byrne
- Cy
- Vaughan
- Clifford
- Garner
- Barony
- Ingram
- Thriller
- Eustace
- Gentleman
- Grimsby
- Payne
- Tko
- Yves
- Baron
- Ruskin
Wiktionary
ROGER, interjection. (radio telecommunications) Received (used in radio communications to acknowledge that a message has been received and understood)
ROGER, verb. (transitive) (coarse slang) Of a man, to have sexual intercourse with (someone), especially in a rough manner.
ROGER, verb. (intransitive) (coarse slang) To have sexual intercourse.
ROGER, proper noun. A male given name.
ROGER, proper noun. (rare compared to given name) A patronymic surname.
ROGER, proper noun. Jolly Roger (pirate flag)
ROGER BEEP, noun. (radio) A tone or tones added to the end of a broadcast segment to indicate that the user/operator has concluded speaking. It is usually added automatically by a power mic, CB radio, or transceiver.
ROGER THAT, interjection. (radio telecommunications) Received (used in radio communications to acknowledge that a message has been received and understood)
ROGER THAT, interjection. (idiom) Used to acknowledge receipt and understanding of a message
Wise words
Words derive their power from the original word.