Find the word definition

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Barger

Barger \Bar"ger\, n. The manager of a barge. [Obs.]

Wiktionary
barger

n. (context obsolete English) The manager of a barge.

Wikipedia
Barger

Barger may refer to:

As a last name:

  • Amy Barger, an American astronomer
  • Carl Barger, Baseball executive
  • Christine Barger, an American actress
  • Cy Barger, baseball player
  • Frank Barger, an American high school football coach
  • George Barger, a chemist
  • Jorn Barger, an American blogger
  • Sonny Barger, Hells Angel
  • Thomas Barger, an American geologist
  • Maud Barger-Wallach, an American female tennis player

Also:

  • Barger-Oosterveld
  • Barger-Compascuum
  • Barger-Erfscheidenveen
  • Barger-Oosterveen
  • R v Barger

See also:

  • Bargeres

Usage examples of "barger".

The Angels talked freely about the money at first, but later denied it, after Sonny Barger passed the word that such talk could get them in tax trouble.

Unlike Barger, Frank had a wry sense of humor and a very sophisticated instinct for self-preservation.

Chapter presidents have no set term in office, and a strong one, like Barger, will remain unchallenged until he goes to jail, gets killed or finds his own reasons for hanging up the colors.

Sonny Barger makes his public debut as club president in 1958 when he gets his skull bashed in a riot quelled by five carloads of policemen.

Sonny Barger and West Coast Angels come east to party with the Lowell chapter.

Angels grow like a dick in a tight twat in the early 1970s with Alexander and Barger at their peaks.

The cops finally put Barger on ice in 1973 when he sentenced to 10 years for possession of heroin for sale ar possession of marijuana and other drugs.

They show, while Sonny Barger jailed, that the club can function without a leader.

Angels who talk with Barger at Bass Lake must put their ears to the blowhole in his throat or read his written comments on a notepad.

Angels in 1948 give the club a military structure that Sonny Barger refines in his Oakland chapter in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Sonny Barger, despite decades of press clippings and police intelligence reports that label him as club president and maximum leader, is nothing more than a highly-respected member.

The Angels phase out sexual badges after 21 years when Sonny Barger recommends in 1969 that the club clean up its act to improve its image and lower its profile.

Sonny Barger and his lieutenants in Oakland respect the man who controls the most murderous Angels in the world.

Wethern, vice-president of the Oakland chapter and best friend to Sonny Barger who recruits him in 1958, tires of the pace in 1969.

Any society that will put Barger in jail and make Al Davis a respectable millionaire at the same time is not a society to be trifled with.