NATO Phonetic Alphabet When speaking on the telephone, it is sometimes useful to spell a word using English phonetic spelling. To spell "Club", for example, you would say: "C for Charlie, L for Lima, U for Uniform, B for Bravo." It is very easy to learn English phonetic spelling. St...
Alfa –derived from Alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet. That was itself probably derived from the Hebrew and Phoenician "aleph", perhaps meaning "ox". Bravo –a word of Italian origin meaning "great" in the context of an activity or "well-behaved", now used in English to ...
A Alpha / Alfa B Bravo C Charlie D Delta E Echo F Foxtrot G Golf H Hotel I India J Juliet K Kilo L Lima M Mike N November O Oscar P Papa Q Quebec R Rome S Sierra T Tango U Uniform V Victor W Whiskey X Xray Y Yankee Z Zulu A History of the Military Alphabet: The ICAO Ph...
To keep things simple for your contact centre team, it’s worth sticking with just one version of the phonetic alphabet. We’d recommend using the standardised NATO spelling alphabet below SymbolCode WordMorse CodePhonic (pronunciation) AAlfa/Alpha● ▬AL FAH ...
Worldwide Alphabet Depending on where you are in the world, the spelling of the words said will be different. For example, Alpha may be spelled Alfa, but the pronunciation stays the same. Today the aviation alphabet is known by people beyond the aviation industry thanks to the internet, TV...
The German Alphabet From A to Z By Ingrid Bauer Phonetic Spelling Chart for German (with audio) This phonetic spelling guide shows the German equivalent of the English/international (Alpha, Bravo, Charlie...) phonetic spelling used to avoid confusion when spelling words on the phone or in radi...
A wie Anton (Alpha) B wie Bertha (Bravo) C wie Cäsar (Charlie) H wie Heinrich (Hotel) Z wie Zeppelin (Zulu) (You can see the full chart on the next page.) If you also need help in learning how to pronounce the German letters of the alphabet (A, B, C...), see ...
Note: While “Alpha” is the typical English spelling, “Alfa” is considered the international spelling, as the “ph” sounds is not recognized globally. It was not until 1941, however, that the US introduced the formal Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet, also known asAble Baker Charlie Alpha...
Worldwide Alphabet Depending on where you are in the world, the spelling of the words said will be different. For example, Alpha may be spelled Alfa, but the pronunciation stays the same. Today the aviation alphabet is known by people beyond the aviation industry thanks to the internet, TV...