/sɑːd͡ʒ/, /sɑɹd͡ʒ/
OriginFrom sergeant, q.v. In reference to PUA slang, coined by American writer and television personality Ross Jeffries after the behavior of his cat Sarge.
- abbreviation, alt-of, clipping, colloquialClipping of sergeant.
- An instance of sarging.
“I did not interpret this advice correctly at first and in the same sarge as the hand-slap Juggler observed that she was really into me and liking my game but a little annoyed that I kept encroaching o”
“I thought it would be funny and depressing to join them on what they call the "Saturday Sarge." A sarge is when a group of morons roam around looking for girls to annoy. Sounds gr8 right?”
- alt-ofAlternative letter-case form of sarge, sergeant.
- intransitiveTo go out and engage women in order to pick them up.
“Sure, the echoes of PUA raise concerns and I have no doubt Saturday Sarge has its fair share of men just wanting to pick up women for sex (Phil says in the four years he's sarged he's only slept with ”
Formssarges(plural) · Sarge(alternative) · sarges(present, singular, third-person) · sarging(participle, present) · sarged(participle, past) · sarged(past) · Sarges(plural)