George

Etymology
Name of an early saint, from, from , from , from , from (combining form ) +.

The aircraft autopilot sense is probably from George DeBeeson, who patented an early (1931) autopilot system, and/or a reference to the expression. The Pullman porter sense derives from, who hired Black people to staff his sleeping cars, and the patrons of the service seeing the Black people as servants of George Porter, much like how an enslaved person was named after the enslaver.

Noun

 * 1)  radiotelephony clear-code word for the letter G.

Proper noun

 * , a variant of Georg.
 * , an anglicization of.
 * 1) ; also used in the conjoined name George Ann(e).
 * 2) * 2004, George Sargent Janes Leubuscher, Douglas W. Patton, A Girl Named George: My First Hundred Years
 * 3)   The autopilot of an aircraft.
 * 4)   Generic name for a Pullman porter.
 * , a variant of Georg.
 * , an anglicization of.
 * 1) ; also used in the conjoined name George Ann(e).
 * 2) * 2004, George Sargent Janes Leubuscher, Douglas W. Patton, A Girl Named George: My First Hundred Years
 * 3)   The autopilot of an aircraft.
 * 4)   Generic name for a Pullman porter.
 * 1)   Generic name for a Pullman porter.
 * 1)   Generic name for a Pullman porter.
 * 1)   Generic name for a Pullman porter.

Synonyms

 * (abbreviation)

Translations

 * Albanian: Gjergj
 * Amharic: ጊዮርጊሰ
 * Arabic: جَاوُرْجِيُوس, جُرْجُس, جُورْج
 * Aragonese: Chorche, Chorxe
 * Aramaic:
 * Classical Syriac: ܓܝܘܪܓܝܣ, ܓܝܘܪܓܝ
 * Armenian: Գևորգ
 * Asturian: Xurde
 * Basque:, , Jurtzi
 * Bengali: জর্জ
 * Bulgarian:
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 佐治
 * Mandarin:
 * Cornish: Jory
 * Corsican: Ghjorghju
 * Czech:
 * Danish: Jørgen, Georg
 * Dutch:, , , , , Goris
 * Esperanto: Georgo
 * Estonian: Jüri, Georg, Jürgen
 * Faroese: Jorgen, Jørundur
 * Finnish:
 * French:, ,
 * Middle French: Iorge, Ieorge, George
 * Galician:
 * Georgian: გიორგი
 * German:
 * Greek:, , ,
 * Ancient: Γεώργιος
 * Greenlandic: Joorut, Juulut
 * Hawaiian: Keoki
 * Hebrew: ג׳ורג׳
 * Hungarian:
 * Icelandic:
 * Inuktitut: ᔫᕐᒋ
 * Irish: Seoirse
 * Italian:, Iorio
 * Japanese:
 * Khmer: ចច
 * Korean: ^조지
 * Latin:
 * Latvian: Juris, Jurģis, Džordžs
 * Lithuanian:
 * Lombard: Giorgiu
 * Low German:
 * German Low German: Jürn
 * Macedonian: Ѓорѓи, Ѓорѓија, Ѓорѓиј,, Гео́ргиј, Гео́ргија, Ѓоре, Ѓоко
 * Malayalam: ഗീവർഗീസ്, വർഗ്ഗീസ്, ജോർജ്, ജോർജ്ജ്‌
 * Maltese: Ġorġ
 * Manx: Shorys
 * Maori: Hōri
 * Mongolian: Жорж
 * Neapolitan: Giòrgë
 * Norwegian: ,
 * Occitan:, Jòrgi
 * Persian: جورج, ژرژ
 * Piedmontese: Giòrs
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:, George, , , Iurie
 * Russian:, , , Его́рий ,
 * Samoan: Siosi
 * Scottish Gaelic: Seòras, Seòrsa, Deòrsa, Dod
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Ђорђе, Ђурађ, Јуре, Ђуро
 * Roman: Đorđe, Đurađ,, Đuro
 * Skolt Sami: Jååǥǥar
 * Slovak: Juraj
 * Slovene: Júre,, Júraj, Georgius
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:, , ,
 * Tamil: ஜார்ஜ்
 * Telugu: జార్జ్
 * Tongan: Siaosi
 * Turkish: Jorj
 * Turkmen: Jorj
 * Ukrainian: Гео́ргій,, Джордж
 * Upper Sorbian:
 * Uyghur: جورج
 * Venetian:, Ðordi
 * Vietnamese: Gioóc-giơ
 * Walloon:
 * Welsh: Siôrs, Siôr, Siors, Siorys
 * West Frisian: Jörn, Joren, Jurg
 * Yiddish: דזשאָרדזש

Noun

 * 1)  A coin bearing King George's profile.
 * 2) A jewelled figure of St George slaying the dragon, worn by Knights of the Garter.
 * 1) A jewelled figure of St George slaying the dragon, worn by Knights of the Garter.

Derived terms

 * (a counterfeit coin)

Etymology
.

Etymology
.

Etymology
..

Derived terms

 * Geordie, Dod, Dodie, Dodge, Dodger
 * (Caithness) Geordag

Etymology
From. Variant of the standard Swedish. Both names ultimately derive from, name of a legendary dragon-slaying saint.