"Bager" is a valid word, primarily acting as the Danish noun for "baker" or a bakery. It is also a surname of Germanic/Scandinavian origin (derived from "baggere" or "bagr") and represents a geographic name in Bulgaria. It is not standard English, where "bagger" is used for someone who packs items.
: a person or device that bags something. a lawn mower equipped with a bagger [=an attachment that collects grass clippings in a bag] especially : a person whose job is to place items (such as groceries) in bags for customers. works as a bagger at a supermarket.
The primary duties of a bagger revolve around putting groceries into a shopping bag and then into a shopping cart. Upon requests, baggers may take the groceries out to a customer's motor vehicle or supply other forms of service.
a person whose job is to put your groceries into bags for you in a store: The Market Basket supermarket in his home town hired him as a bagger when he was 16.
"Banger" is a slang term often used in music to describe a song that is catchy and exciting. The term is often used to describe a song that's really good, catchy and gets stuck in your head. For example, if someone says "That song is a banger," they mean that the song is really good and enjoyable to listen to.
A bagger is a person whose job is to put customers' purchases into bags at a supermarket or other store. In addition to being a bagger, he's worked at a fast-food restaurant.
US. : a boy or young man hired to place shoppers' purchases (such as groceries) in bags. Smith grew up with the company starting as a bag boy in high school.
Bizek word of the day: badger (băj′ər) (v.): to harass or annoy persistently; pester; nag; to ask (someone) repeatedly and annoyingly for something. Rezaul Rose and 77 others. 12. Chris Osborn. In Australian slang it is a particularly raucous breaking of wind.
A bugler is a person who plays the bugle. Often, a bugler is a soldier who used the bugle to send signals and orders. There are several words for musicians who play a specific instrument: a guitarist plays the guitar, a pianist plays the piano — and a bugler plays the bugle.
The German consonant 't' is pronounced in a similar manner to its English equivalent, although slightly less air is released in its articulation. In both languages, the sound is an alveolar plosive, which means that it is made with the blade of the tongue pressing against the alveolar ridge.