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The Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet is not a phonetic alphabet in the sense in which that term is used in phonetics, i.e., it is not a system for transcribing speech sounds. See the phonetic alphabet disambiguation page, and also phonetic notation.

The Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet was developed in 1941 and was used by all branches of the United States military until the promulgation of the NATO phonetic alphabet in 1956, which replaced it. Before the JAN phonetic alphabet, each branch of the armed forces used its own phonetic alphabet, leading to difficulties in interbranch communication.

The Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet is as follows:

Letter Phonetic Letter Phonetic Letter Phonetic
A Able M Mike Y Yoke
B Baker N Nan Z Zebra
C Charlie O Oboe 0 Zero
D Dog P Peter 1 One
E Easy Q Queen 2 Two
F Fox R Roger 3 Three
G George S Sail 4 Four
H How T Tare 5 Five
I Item U Uncle 6 Six
J Jig V Victor 7 Seven
K King W William 8 Eight
L Love X X-ray 9 Niner

External links


  • Source: http://www.bckelk.uklinux.net/able.html
  • http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq101-1.htm U.S. Navy chart of military phonetic alphabets from 1913 to the present.
  • http://gordon.army.mil/ocos/Museum To see "U.S. Army Signal Corp chart of military phonetic alphabets from 1916 to the present," click link "Exhibits and collections management" then under ARCHIVES click on link "phonetic alphabet" in sentence.

Military of the United States | Spelling alphabet | Military communications

Joint_Army/Navy_Phonetic_Alphabet

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet".

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