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NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

A Wisdom Archive on NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, International maritime signal flags

ARTICLES RELATED TO NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

The German-speaking peoples are accustomed to writing some vowels in their language with seemingly inseparable umlauts. Each of their countries has had its own radiotelephonic alphabet for decades before the ICAO had their alphabet and they are loathe to do without words for these vowels. To the above NATO series has been added Ärger ("anger") for <Ä>, Öse ("grommet") for <Ö>, and Übel ("evil") for <Ü>. These additions are not in the ICAO alphabet, however, and are generally unknown outside the Ge ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation

The pronunciation of the words in the alphabet as well as numbers may vary according to the language habits of the speakers. In order to eliminate wide variations in pronunciation, posters illustrating the pronunciation desired are available from the ICAO. Unless otherwise specified, the spelling and pronunciation given is that officially prescribed by the ICAO, ITU, IMO, and the FAA. The ICAO indicates unstressed numeric syllables in lower case (stressed in UPPER CASE), unlike its own alphabet, where stressed syllables are UNDERLI ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Two television series (and a comic book adaptation by Charlton comics) were named "Adam-12", the radio call sign for the patrol car the two main characters were assigned to. The theme song to the original series was prefaced with simulated radio traffic which began with the call "One Adam Twelve". The NATO phonetic alphabet is referred to repeatedly in Robert Ludlum's novel The Bourne Identity. The phrase Cain is for Charlie and Delta is for Cain is repeated, always italicised, ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants

At some United States airports, the use of Delta for the letter D is avoided because it is also the callsign for Delta Air Lines. "Dixie" seems to be the most common substitute. Foxtrot may be abbreviated as Fox (FOKS) at United States airports. In British police work the use of India has been replaced by "Indigo". In the Philippines, the word Hawk is sometimes used for the letter H, rather than Hotel. In Indonesia, the word "Lima" for letter L is seldom used since the word "lima" means number five (5) in Bahasa Indonesia. ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage

Most of the words are recognizable by native English speakers because English must be used upon request for communication between an aircraft and a control tower whenever two nations are involved, regardless of their native languages. But it is only required internationally, not domestically, thus if both parties to a radio conversation are from the same country, then another phonetic alphabet of that nation's choice may be used. In most versions of the alphabet, the non-English spellings Alfa and Juliett are found. Alfa is spe ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage

NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - History

The first internationally recognized alphabet was adopted by the ITU in 1927. The experience gained with that alphabet resulted in several changes being made in 1932 by the ITU. The resulting alphabet was adopted by the International Commission for Air Navigation, the predecessor of the ICAO, and was used in civil aviation until World War II. It continued to be used by the IMO until 1965: Amsterdam Baltimore Casablanca Denmark Edison Florida Gallipoli Havana Italia Jerusalem Kilogramme Liverpool Madagascar New_York Oslo Paris Quebec Roma Santiago Tripoli Upsala ...

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NATO phonetic alphabet, NATO phonetic alphabet - Alphabet and pronunciation, NATO phonetic alphabet - History, NATO phonetic alphabet - Usage, NATO phonetic alphabet - Additions in German Danish and Norwegian, NATO phonetic alphabet - Variants, NATO phonetic alphabet - Older phonetic alphabets, NATO phonetic alphabet - Phonetic alphabet in popular culture

Read more here: » NATO phonetic alphabet: Encyclopedia II - NATO phonetic alphabet - History

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