A radio is great, but good reception is key. This Kaito emergency radio has a telescopic antenna that extends up to Built-in speakers deliver loud and crisp sound, so you're never having to guess what's being said.
Responding to a message with the letter "R," for example, simply let the sender know their message had been received.
When two-way radio came along, the shorthand continued, but with the word "Roger" instead of "R" itself. Even though Roger has since been replaced with Romeo and was "Robert" before it was ever Roger , the widespread use of the two-ray radio during the WWII wildly popularized the saying we still use so casually today.
Roger that? Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. In military slang, the phrase Roger wilco conveyed the recipient received the message and will comply with its orders, shortened to wilco.
Soon after, Roger that entered the popular lexicon as an interjection Roger! Though Roger is no longer the official term for R in radiotelephony in the military, law enforcement, aviation, and navigation, Roger and Roger that do still enjoy use in military, commercial, and recreational communication to confirm receipt of messages or orders.
Roger that , however, is more commonly used in everyday speech and writing, equivalent to a Yes or OK. This is not meant to be a formal definition of Roger that like most terms we define on Dictionary. Feedback See Today's Synonym. More from Merriam-Webster on roger Britannica. Get Word of the Day daily email! Test Your Vocabulary.
Can you spell these 10 commonly misspelled words? Love words? Need even more definitions? Homophones, Homographs, and Homonyms The same, but different. Ask the Editors 'Everyday' vs. Ethical conundrums. This sporting life. Stage and screen. Birds and the bees. It is also used in maritime communications to acknowledge communications. In radio communication, a "spelling alphabet" often mistakenly called a "phonetic alphabet is used to avoid confusion between similarly sounding letters.
In the previously used US spelling alphabet, R was Roger, which in radio voice procedure means "Received". While in the current spelling alphabet NATO , R is now Romeo, Roger has remained the response meaning "received" in radio voice procedure. In the US military, it is common to reply to another's assertion with "Roger that", meaning: "I agree". I once had an idea for a television comedy series that followed the exploits of a roguish NCO called Sergeant Willco but was upstaged by Phil Silvers.
I sevred in Vietnam January to January I became a radioman on are about March of Being hispanic my vocabulary was very limited I had trouble pronouncing many words
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