The NATO phonetic alphabet is now widely used in business and telecommunications in Europe and North America, and has been approved by ICAO for use in international civil aviation. It has been adopted by the International Telegraphers Union[?] (ITU), after which it is named by many radio operators.
The alphabet is used to spell out parts of a message or call sign that are critical or otherwise hard to recognize during voice communication. For instance the message "proceed to map grid DH98" could be transmitted as "proceed to map grid Delta-Hotel-Niner-Eight" and a C-130 Hercules plane directly ahead might be described as a "Charlie One Thirty in your twelve o'clock".
The NATO phonetic alphabet is as follows:
Letter | Phonetic | Letter | Phonetic | Letter | Phonetic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | Alpha | M | Mike | Y | Yankee |
B | Bravo | N | November | Z | Zulu |
C | Charlie | O | Oscar | 0 | Zero |
D | Delta | P | Papa | 1 | One |
E | Echo | Q | Quebec | 2 | Two |
F | Foxtrot | R | Romeo | 3 | Three |
G | Golf | S | Sierra | 4 | Four |
H | Hotel | T | Tango | 5 | Five |
I | India | U | Uniform | 6 | Six |
J | Juliet | V | Victor | 7 | Seven |
K | Kilo | W | Whiskey | 8 | Eight |
L | Lima | X | X-ray | 9 | Niner |
Several letter codes and abbreviations using the phonetic alphabet have become well-known, such as Bravo Zulu (letter code BZ) for "well done", Sierra Hotel (SH from "shit hot") for "extremely capable" and Checkpoint Charlie (Checkpoint C). Sometimes they are used as euphemism, e.g. Charlie-Foxtrot for cluster fuck.
From Federal Standard 1037C and from the Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms
Older phonetic alphabets In addition to the RAF and US Army/Navy alphabets referred to above, numerous other phonetic alphabets have been used in the past.
This appears to be the origin of the RAF slang phrases such as ack emma for morning, pip emma for afternoon and ack-ack for anti-aircraft.
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