Roger

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Roger is primarily a proper name of English, French and Catalan usage, derived from the German name Rüdiger which means "famous with the spear" from the Germanic elements hrod (fame) and ger (spear). The Latin form of the name is Rogerius, as used by a few medieval figures.

The name "Roger" was transmitted to England by the Normans after the Norman Conquest along with other names such as William, Robert, Richard, and Hugh. It replaced its Anglo-Saxon cognate, Hroðgar.

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[edit] Phonetics

Roger also means "copy", "heard you" on the radio in the military and civilian aviation. This usage comes from the letter "R" of "received" which in the old phonetic alphabet was called "roger" (now called Romeo) in radio alphabets (such as the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet). It is commonly followed by the word "that" to form the common aviation phrase "Roger That". It is also often shortened in writing to "rgr".

It in fact does not mean "I will comply" as many think, that distinction goes to the phrase "wilco" which is formed from the phrase "will comply".

[edit] Slang

Roger is also a short version of the term Jolly Roger which refers to a black flag with white skull and crossbones, formerly used by sea pirates since as early as 1723.

"Roger" has an old (1711) vulgar slang usage as a verb where it means to have sexual intercourse with a woman. After a number of comic references throughout the late 20th century, in the late 1990s the word 'roger' as a sexual act came back into more frequent use, chiefly amongst the young, male, upper class intellectual elite.

From c.1650 to c.1870 it was slang for the word "penis."[1]

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