rogers

listen to the pronunciation of rogers
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von rogers im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

roger
anlaşıldı
family name
soyadı

Çin'de önce soyadımızı sonra adımızı koyarız. - In China, we put our family name first, then our name.

Sadece soyadınızı büyük harflerle yazın. - Write only your family name in capitals.

roger
tamam!
roger
anlaşıldı!
roger
evet! peki!
roger
Anlaşıldı, tamam! Bir telsiz telefon haberinin alındığını bildirmek için kullanılan ifade
roger
ANLAşıLDı: Bir telsiz telefon haberinin alındığını bildirmek için kullanılan kelime
Roger
(isim) roger
Roger
{i} roger
family name
aile adı

Aile adın nasıl yazılır? - How is your family name written?

Aile adınızı nasıl hecelersiniz? - How do you spell your family name?

roger
(Askeri) ANLAŞILDI: Bir telsiz telefon haberinin alındığını bildirmek için kullanılan kelime. Bu kelime (received-alındı) kelimesi yerine kullanılan "R" harfi karşılığıdır
roger
dili Evet! Peki!
roger
(Askeri) mesaj alındı ve anlaşıldı
roger
tamam
Englisch - Englisch
A town in Arkansas, and other U.S. places named for bearers of the surname
An English patronymic surname derived from Roger
a town in Arkansas
American dancer and actress particularly noted for her partnership with Fred Astaire in several motion pictures, including Swing Time (1936). She won an Academy Award in 1940 for her performance in Kitty Foyle (1940). American sculptor noted for his groups of small sculptures, such as "Checkers up at the Farm" and "The Slave Auction" (both 1859). American soldier and frontiersman who led (1758-1763) the Rogers's Rangers on a series of daring missions during the French and Indian War. American singer and actor who played a singing cowboy in motion-picture Westerns. American humorist noted for his wry homespun commentary on American society and politics. Prince Rogers Nelson Brown Joseph Rogers Clark George Rogers Commons John Rogers Hornsby Rogers Rogers Carl Ransom Rogers Fred McFeely Rogers Ginger Rogers Robert Rogers Roy Leonard Franklin Slye Rogers Rogers William Penn Adair Samuel Shepard Rogers
{i} family name
United States psychologist who developed client-centered therapy (1902-1987)
third-person singular of roger
United States dancer and film actress who partnered with Fred Astaire (born 1911)
United States humorist remembered for his homespun commentary on politics and American society (1879-1935)
United States psychologist who developed client-centered therapy (1902-1987) United States dancer and film actress who partnered with Fred Astaire (born 1911) United States humorist remembered for his homespun commentary on politics and American society (1879-1935)
Rogers Hornsby
born April 27, 1896, Winters, Texas, U.S. died Jan. 5, 1963, Chicago, Ill. U.S. baseball player. Playing second base for the St. Louis Cardinals (1915-26), Hornsby led the National League in batting for six consecutive seasons, 1920-25. In 1928, with the Boston Braves, he again led the league. For five years, 1921-25, he averaged .401, hitting over .400 in three of those seasons. His 1924 average of .424 is the highest attained in the major leagues in the 20th century. In 1926, as the Cardinals' playing manager, he led the team to a World Series victory over the New York Yankees. He later managed the Boston (1928), Chicago (1930-32), and Cincinnati (1952-53) teams in the National League and the St. Louis Browns (1933-37, 1952) in the American League. His career batting average of .358 is second only to Ty Cobb's .367
Rogers Plan
series of American proposals for a Middle East peace plan (1969 - 1971)
Roy Rogers
A non-alcoholic cocktail made with a cola soda (typically Coca-Cola) and grenadine syrup, garnished with a maraschino cherry
Robert Rogers
born Nov. 7, 1731, Methuen, Mass. died May 18, 1795, London, Eng. American frontier soldier. He raised and commanded a militia called Rogers's Rangers, which earned fame in the French and Indian War and in Pontiac's War. He led the first English exploration of the upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes region (1766) but failed to reach the Pacific Ocean, his intended goal. In the American Revolution he was regarded as a loyalist spy; imprisoned by George Washington, he escaped to organize the Queen's Rangers, which he led in operations around New York. Defeated in 1780, he fled to England
Roy Rogers
a US film and television actor and singer who usually appeared as a cowboy. He is best known for the 1950s television programme The Roy Rogers Show, in which he appeared with his wife Dale Evans (1912-2001) and his horse Trigger. At the end of the programme they always sang the song Happy Trails to You (1912-98). a drink for children in the US, made from lemonade and grenadine (=a sweet red liquid) , and served with a cherry. Roy Rogers are usually served in restaurants, and they are sometimes called Shirley Temples if they are served to girls. orig. Leonard Franklin Slye Rogers born Nov. 5, 1911/12, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. died July 6, 1998, Apple Valley, Calif. U.S. actor and singer. During his childhood Rogers took up singing, guitar playing, and square-dance calling. He made radio and personal appearances with a succession of groups before helping form the singing group Sons of the Pioneers. He acted in westerns with Gene Autry, whom he replaced as "King of the Cowboys" when Autry went to war. His films include Tumbling Tumbleweeds (1935), Red River Valley (1941), and Yellow Rose of Texas (1944). He acted in several with his wife, Dale Evans, usually riding his famous horse, Trigger. He also starred on radio in The Roy Rogers Show (1944-55) as well as on television in a series of the same name (1951-57)
Jolly Rogers
plural form of Jolly Roger
Roger
A male given name
roger
Of a man, to have sexual intercourse with (someone), especially in a rough manner
roger
Received (used in radio communications to acknowledge that a message has been received and understood)

Roger, sir.

Buck Rogers
the main character in a US comic who has many adventures in other parts of the universe. The character has also been used in films and television programmes
Carl R Rogers
born Jan. 8, 1902, Oak Park, Ill., U.S. died Feb. 4, 1987, La Jolla, Calif. U.S. psychologist. He trained at Teachers College, Columbia University (Ph.D., 1931), and directed a children's agency in New York before taking teaching positions at various universities. In 1963 he helped found an institute for the study of the person in La Jolla, Calif. He is known as the originator of client-centred, or nondirective, psychotherapy, and he helped establish humanistic psychology. His writings include Counseling and Psychotherapy (1942), Client-Centered Therapy (1951), Psychotherapy and Personality Change (1954), and On Becoming a Person (1961)
Carl Ransom Rogers
born Jan. 8, 1902, Oak Park, Ill., U.S. died Feb. 4, 1987, La Jolla, Calif. U.S. psychologist. He trained at Teachers College, Columbia University (Ph.D., 1931), and directed a children's agency in New York before taking teaching positions at various universities. In 1963 he helped found an institute for the study of the person in La Jolla, Calif. He is known as the originator of client-centred, or nondirective, psychotherapy, and he helped establish humanistic psychology. His writings include Counseling and Psychotherapy (1942), Client-Centered Therapy (1951), Psychotherapy and Personality Change (1954), and On Becoming a Person (1961)
Fred McFeely Rogers
known as Mr. Rogers born March 20, 1928, La Trobe, Pa., U.S. died Feb. 27, 2003, Pittsburgh, Pa. U.S. television host and producer. He produced the local public-television show The Children's Corner (1954-61) and later created a similar program, Mister Rogers, for Canadian television (1963-64). In 1968 he developed it into Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Known for his gentleness and his desire to educate, Rogers, who was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1962, used puppets, music, and guests to teach his viewers about various subjects and emotions. His show, the longest-running U.S. children's television program, garnered many honours. In 2002 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian honour
Fred Rogers
known as Mr. Rogers born March 20, 1928, La Trobe, Pa., U.S. died Feb. 27, 2003, Pittsburgh, Pa. U.S. television host and producer. He produced the local public-television show The Children's Corner (1954-61) and later created a similar program, Mister Rogers, for Canadian television (1963-64). In 1968 he developed it into Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Known for his gentleness and his desire to educate, Rogers, who was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1962, used puppets, music, and guests to teach his viewers about various subjects and emotions. His show, the longest-running U.S. children's television program, garnered many honours. In 2002 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian honour
George Rogers Clark
born Nov. 19, 1752, Albemarle county, Va. died Feb. 13, 1818, near Louisville, Ky., U.S. Frontier military leader in the American Revolution. The brother of William Clark, he worked as a surveyor in Kentucky in the mid-1770s. During the Revolution he raised troops and defended the region against the British and Indians. He captured settlements along the Mississippi River in the Old Northwest (Illinois), and in 1780 he helped defeat a British attempt to capture St. Louis. Appointed an Indian commissioner, he helped conclude a treaty with the Shawnee. In 1793 he became involved in the Citizen Genêt Affair
Ginger Rogers
(1911-1995, born as Virginia McMath) Academy Award-winning US singer dancer and actress
Ginger Rogers
a US dancer and film actress who made many musical films, often with the dancer Fred Astaire. Her films include 42nd Street (1933) and Top Hat (1935) (1911-95). orig. Virginia Katherine McMath born July 16, 1911, Independence, Mo., U.S. died April 25, 1995, Rancho Mirage, Calif. U.S. film actress. She began her career as a dancer in vaudeville and made her Broadway debut in 1929. After starring in Girl Crazy (1930-31), she moved to Hollywood. Her first performance with Fred Astaire, in Flying Down to Rio (1933), was so popular that they continued the partnership in nine more movies, including The Gay Divorcee (1934), Top Hat (1935), and Swing Time (1936). She also acted in the drama Kitty Foyle (1940, Academy Award) and in light comedies such as Tom, Dick, and Harry (1941) and The Major and the Minor (1942). Rogers returned to the Broadway stage in 1965, taking the lead in Hello Dolly!, and she followed that in 1969 with a star performance as Mame in London
John Rogers Commons
born Oct. 13, 1862, Hollandsburg, Ohio, U.S. died May 11, 1945, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. U.S. economist. He taught at the University of Wisconsin (1904-32) and published works such as A Documentary History of American Industrial Society (10 vol., 1910-11) and A History of Labor in the United States (4 vol., 1918-35), in which he linked the evolution of the U.S. labour movement to changes in the market structure. He drafted reform legislation for Wisconsin and worked for the federal government in areas including civil service and worker's compensation
Joseph Rogers Brown
born Jan. 26, 1810, Warren, R.I., U.S. died July 23, 1876, Isles of Shoals, N.H. U.S. inventor and manufacturer. He perfected and produced a highly accurate linear dividing engine in 1850, and then developed a vernier caliper and also applied vernier methods to the protractor. With Lucian Sharpe he founded the Brown and Sharpe Manufacturing Co. His micrometre caliper appeared in 1867. He invented a precision gear cutter to produce clock gears, a universal milling machine, and (perhaps his finest innovation) a universal grinding machine, in which articles were hardened first and then ground, thereby increasing accuracy and eliminating waste
Richard Rogers
born in Italy. His buildings are very modern, and are famous for having pipes etc on the outside. He is especially known for his work on the Pompidou Centre in Paris and for buildings in London, especially the Lloyd's Building (1933- ) a British architect (=someone who designs buildings)
Roger
{i} male first name
Roger
given name, male
Roger
Jolly Roger. to have sex with someone. born Dec. 22, 1095 died Feb. 26, 1154, Palermo Grand count of Sicily (1105-30) and king of Sicily (1130-54). The son of Roger I, he was a capable and energetic ruler who incorporated the mainland territories of Calabria (1122) and Apulia (1127). He was crowned king by the antipope Anacletus II, and he forced Innocent II to confirm him in 1139. He built a powerful navy but refused to join the Second Crusade, preferring as the ruler of a largely Arab population to show tolerance toward Muslims. He promulgated a law code (1140), and his court was an intellectual center for both Arab and Western scholars. known as Roger Guiscard born 1031, Normandy, France died June 22, 1101, Mileto, Calabria Count of Sicily (1072-1101). A Norman knight, he went to Italy (1057) to help his brother Robert Guiscard take Calabria from the Byzantines (1060). They launched a campaign to conquer Sicily from the Muslims (1061). When they captured Palermo (1072), Roger was granted a limited right to govern Sicily and Calabria. After Robert's death, he gained full right to govern and created an efficient centralized government. Ascham Roger Bacon Roger Baldwin Roger Nash Bannister Sir Roger Gilbert Casement Sir Roger David Clemens William Roger Pierre Roger Corman Roger William Cray Seymour Roger Fenton Roger Fry Roger Eliot Guillemin Roger Charles Louis Maris Roger Roger Eugene Maris Martin du Gard Roger Peterson Roger Tory Roger II Roger I Roger Guiscard Saint Exupéry Antoine Marie Roger de Sessions Roger Huntington Shepard Roger Newland Sherman Roger Sperry Roger Staubach Roger Thomas Taney Roger Brooke Roger of Helmarshausen Vadim Plemiannikov Roger Williams Roger
Will Rogers
a US humorous writer and performer. Rogers sometimes told jokes while spinning a lasso (=a rope with one end tied in a circle) and often used jokes to criticize politicians. He was known for his short, clever, funny sayings, such as "I don't make jokes - I just watch the government and report the facts." (1879-1935). born Nov. 4, 1879, Indian Territory, U.S. [near present-day Claremore, Okla.] died Aug. 15, 1935, near Point Barrow, Alaska U.S. humorist and actor. Raised in Indian Territory, he demonstrated his rope-twirling skills in Wild West shows and vaudeville and gradually wove bits of homespun wit into his act. He was popular in New York City from 1905 and starred in Florenz Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic (1915). Noted for his good-natured but sharp criticism of current affairs, he wrote a newspaper column in the New York Times (from 1922) as well as several books. He performed on radio and in movies such as State Fair (1933) and Steamboat Round the Bend (1935). His death in a plane crash in Alaska with the aviator Wiley Post (1899-1935) was widely mourned
William Penn Adair Rogers
born Nov. 4, 1879, Indian Territory, U.S. [near present-day Claremore, Okla.] died Aug. 15, 1935, near Point Barrow, Alaska U.S. humorist and actor. Raised in Indian Territory, he demonstrated his rope-twirling skills in Wild West shows and vaudeville and gradually wove bits of homespun wit into his act. He was popular in New York City from 1905 and starred in Florenz Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic (1915). Noted for his good-natured but sharp criticism of current affairs, he wrote a newspaper column in the New York Times (from 1922) as well as several books. He performed on radio and in movies such as State Fair (1933) and Steamboat Round the Bend (1935). His death in a plane crash in Alaska with the aviator Wiley Post (1899-1935) was widely mourned
roger
To have sexual intercourse
roger
A black flag with white skull and crossbones, formerly used by pirates; called also Jolly Roger
roger
Commonly used word in aviation communications Just like "10-4" in other types of communications, it means that the instruction has been understood Also, to roger is to repeat the instruction as to make sure it has been clearly understood
roger
Used when you're not sure what else to say
roger
A guard in the dungeons of Amber Castle, also a writer
roger
I have received all of your last transmission It should not be used to answer a question requiring a yes or a no answer
roger
{ü} OK!, the message has been received (used in wireless communication)
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von rogers im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

Roger
Roger
rogers

    Silbentrennung

    Rog·ers

    Türkische aussprache

    räcırz

    Aussprache

    /ˈräʤərz/ /ˈrɑːʤɜrz/

    Videos

    ...  Anything planetary they control.  Sort of like Buck Rogers or Flash Gordon. ...
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