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Phoenetic Alphabet?????
Maybe not the right place but does anyone know the "old" phonetic alphabet ??? ie a = alan b = bob etc??
thanks burner:p |
Oz phonetics.....
A - Abbo B - Beer C - Christ (oi'll 'ave another beer!) D - Dunny E - Edna (Our Dame - and a bonza sheila to boot!) F - Fosters G - G'day .....etc |
Just thought I'd add,
Dingo's (Shela....!!!!) O(J) - Orange Juice S - Struth W - Western Diamond Back (Snake) |
Which one do you mean? The WW1 ish version Ack Beer etc or the Able Baker Charlie Dog Easy Fox George How Item Jig King Love Mike Nan Oboe Peter Queenie Roger Sugar Tare Uncle Victor Whisky Xray Yoke Zebra.
Just finished learning the one above when they changed it :D :D |
Thanks guys both for the amusment and the serious.....:)
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CUNIM, do you have the Ack Beer Charlie one in full? If so could you post it please?
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Found it
Ack, Beer, Charlie, Don, Edward, Freddy, George, Harry, Ink, Johnnie, King, London, Monkey, Nuts, Orange, Pip, Queen, Robert, Sugar, Toc, Uncle, Vic, William, X-ray, Yorker, Zebra Squillions of 'em at http://montgomery.cas.muohio.edu/mey...cAlphabets.htm |
The reason for the change to what has now become the standard one "Alfa, Bravo, Charlie....etc" is supposed to be that none of the words rhyme with any other English language word, and so should not be confused with "soundalikes" - which was not the case with either of the previous ones.
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Wasn't N 'Nectar' in the original version of the current phonetic alphabet before being changed to 'November'?
Presumably 'Nectar' sounded too much like 'Echo'? |
Another phoenetic alphabet that I doubt any of you have heard of ...
In the world of international telephone operators, before international direct dialling became a commonplace, all calls between countries were connected manually. Some of you may remember having to book a call for busy holiday periods and then hearing the international operators call the distance country and then the subscriber (as they were). To facilitiate the exchange of information, an international phoenetic alphabet was divised. I have no idea when or by whom, not can I remember all of it but some were ... L - London P - Paris R - Rome S - Sydney It only fell out of use in the 1990s. |
Something I found, Hope It helps
The Military Phonetic Alphabet Pre-World War II WW II/Korean War Vietnam Era to Present AFFIRM ABLE ALPHA BAKER BAKER BRAVO CAST CHARLIE CHARLIE DOG DOG DELTA EASY EASY ECHO FOX FOX FOXTROT GEORGE GEORGE GOLF HYPO HOW HOTEL INT ITEM INDIA JIG JIG JULIET KING KING KILO LOVE LOVE LIMA MIKE MIKE MIKE NEGAT NAN NOVEMBER OPTION OBOE OSCAR PREP PETER PAPA QUEEN QUEEN QUEBEC ROGER ROGER ROMEO SAD SUGAR SIERRA TARE TARE TANGO UNIT UNCLE UNIFORM VICTOR VICTOR VICTOR WILLIAM WILLIAM WHISKEY X-RAY X-RAY X-RAY YOKE YOKE YANKEE ZEBRA ZEBRA ZULU |
I'd never heard of "Nectar". That's a new one on me. If they discarded it, it wouldn't necessarily be because it could be confused with "Echo". The whole idea was that it shouldn't sound close to ANY other English word, so that someone not familiar with the phonetic alphabet would still recognise it. Nectar would sound fairly close, especially in crackly static conditions to Hector, Lecture, Sector, Rector (well. you never know who might be on the other end) or Vector.
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I always have a laugh at "girlie" phonetics from receptionists,call centre girls etc.Booked a Singapore airlines flight recently-"..thats S for Slimey,Q for Cucumber"
(edited because the censor thinks that "ssniger" for "laugh is offensive!!) |
Let's try it with NIGERIA.....
Well, that worked! |
Another phonetic N
At the time of the changeover to the current alphabet we had a CO who was a devoted lay preacher. Came the big day and he was leading the first pair. They got airborne and he called the tower to change to approach frequency which was designated N. "Tower, Red airborne changing to N...........eerrr,N.........eerr, N... Nonconformist" :) |
Any one know if there is any truth to the story that you cannot register your boat name as Mai Tai because on the air it sounds like an Australian declaring an emergency? Someone told me that and I always wondered if I was being had.
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Nothing to do with the phonetic alphabet, but I like the story of when the Australians sent a regiment to fight in the Vietnam war. It was on the TV news and an anti-war journalist pounced on the first guy off the aircraft, an Australian sergeant trooper with a big bush hat and challenged him. "Did you come here to die?" he sneered.
"No, mate", he said, "We came here yesterdie. We been travelling inside the country all todie." |
You'll find another minor variation in some Middle Eastern countries where 'whiskey' has been replaced by 'wadi'. I wonder why?
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