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To snuggle up to someone. Ideally girlfriend or boyfriend. Can also be a parent or any other friendly person of good moral standing.

Although, when not in the context of a healthy relationship, the 'Coodge' should be used cautiously and not be allowed to enter the final stages. Often involving passionate kissing of the lips and/or neck.
Benji: "Hi Kate, fancy a coodge?"

Kate: "Yeah sure."

--------------------------------------------

Kate: "Do you want to come over today?"

Benji: "No, you have bare work to do, I should let you get on with it."

Kate: "We can coodge.."

Benji: "I'll be over in a minute."
Coodge by Banjo Rofl January 16, 2011
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CooderBob 

A broad term for a handsome man who happens to be a stupid, hillbilly redneck racist who can't read and wields a chainsaw.
When yoyre illiterate and science confuses you, don't use a chainsaw. You'll be accused of being a stupid CooderBob.

Heidi- "Who is that handsome man with the chainsaw?"

Tim- "Don't be fooled! It's a CooderBob!"
Related Words
Coodge coodle Codge codger coodies clodge cooge cooger Coogee Codge Lodge

coogee bay ice cream 

Man, that new game from Microsoft is like a serving of coogee bay ice cream.

(see news story)
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,27574,24552137-1242,00.html
coogee bay ice cream by hayso March 5, 2009
The Cooge is a shortened name that locals have given to Coogee Beach.

Maroubra Beach has been called "The Bra" since the 70's and Coogee Beach is called "The Cooge."
"I'll meet you at the Cooge."
the cooge by TheDoctor2013 October 30, 2013
an old person. Derives from coffin dodger
some old codger died last night at the old peoples home
codger by duncan disorderly April 14, 2003
The origin of codger seems to lie in the complex links between cadger and codger (not as a contraction of 'coffin-dodger', as one of my more inventive correspondents has suggested). In some parts of England the two words were used interchangeably, whereas in other regions they were separate words, one meaning 'beggar' and the other 'eccentric/grotesque fellow'. The latter meaning is the one used in an early example of 'old codger', David Garrick's farce Bon Ton, 1775:

"My Lord's servants call you an old out-of-fashion'd Codger."

Men who had fallen on hard times and had resorted to any means possible to keep body and soul together were often those who were too old to find work. A cadger was likely to be a grizzled character wanting to borrow or steal from you; a codger was a peculiar and unfashionable chap, and both were likely to be old. 'Old codger' is most likely to be the linguistic merging of all those images.
David Garrick's farce Bon Ton, 1775:

"My Lord's servants call you an old out-of-fashion'd Codger."
Codger by Nikolai Luzhin November 14, 2009
-Also known as 'The Gee'
-The best beach ever
-The best suburb ever
-Famous for its shore-dumpers
-Famous for Giles(A dare-devils retreat at high tide)
Man 1: Lets body surf at the gee
Man 2: nah man unless we wanna break our necks in the shories at coogee
coogee by Saidy12345 March 29, 2009