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| | <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet is referred to repeatedly in Robert Ludlum's novel The Bourne Identity. |  | | The century older International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (IPA) is often confused with the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet owing to their similar names. |  | | The Combine in the Half-Life 2 computer game use a modified <b>phoneticb> alphabet, with such codes as "apex", "ion", "jet", "mace", "nova", "payback", "flatline", "sundown" and "ripcord". |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_phonetic_alphabet
(2558 words)
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| | Encyclopedia: <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet is a common name for the radiotelephony spelling alphabet of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), which assigned words to the letters of the English alphabet so that critical combinations of letters could be pronounced and understood by aircrew and air traffic controllers regardless of their native language. |  | | After further study and modification by each approving body, the revised alphabet was implemented November 1, 1951: The Joint Army/Navy <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet was developed in 1941 and was used by all branches of the United States military until the promulgation of the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet in 1956, which replaced it. |  | | The final version given in the table above was implemented on March 1, 1956, and was undoubtedly adopted shortly thereafter by the ITU, because it appears in the 1959 Radio Regulations as an established <b>phoneticb> alphabet. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/NATO-phonetic-alphabet
(3781 words)
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| | Alphabet Originate on Almondnet |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet was developed in the 1950s to be intelligible (and pronounceable) to all... |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet is now widely used in business and telecommunications... |  | | a notational standard for the <b>phoneticb> representation of all languages - the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (also IPA). |
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http://www.ncpm.co.uk/popmusic/alphabet_originate.html
(475 words)
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| | <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The century older International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (IPA) is often confused with the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet owing to their similar names. |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet is referred to repeatedly in Robert Ludlum's novel The Bourne Identity. |  | | The Combine in the Half-Life 2 computer game use a modified <b>phoneticb> alphabet, with such codes as "apex", "ion", "jet", "mace", "nova", "payback", "flatline", "sundown" and "ripcord". |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_phonetic_alphabet
(2558 words)
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| | <b>Phoneticb> alphabet tables - Alpha Bravo Charlie |
 | | I printed this page, cut out the table containing the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet (below), and taped it to the side of my computer monitor when I was a telephone help desk technician. |  | | An alternate version, Western Union's <b>phoneticb> alphabet, is presented in case the <b>NATOb> version sounds too militaristic to you. |  | | Useful for spelling words and names over the phone. |
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http://www.osric.com/chris/phonetic.html
(84 words)
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| | International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet has also informally been called the 'International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet', though these two are unrelated. |  | | The International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (IPA) is a system of <b>phoneticb> notation devised by linguists to accurately and uniquely represent each of the wide variety of sounds (phones or phonemes) used in spoken human language. |  | | The IPA is not the only <b>phoneticb> transcription system in use. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Phonetic_Alphabet
(84 words)
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| | International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (Anders Jacobsen's blog) |
 | | Alpha Bravo Charlie etc are part of the so-called <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet, which, it appears, has never been formally published by <b>NATOb> at all. |  | | In the section for "random things only Anders would bother looking up", I recently learned that what I always thought was called the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet -- the Alpha-Bravo-Charlie from army films and Air Traffic Control communications -- is not actually called the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet at all! |  | | From my pilot friends back at school, I knew that there are several different <b>phoneticb> alphabets. |
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http://www.jacobsen.no/anders/blog/archives/2004/09/10/international_phonetic_alphabet.html
(231 words)
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| | Morse Code and <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet Page |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet is the most common, but the others are used in other areas. |  | | Below are listed Morse Code plus a few <b>phoneticb> alphabets. |
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http://www.sckans.edu/~sireland/radio/code.html
(98 words)
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| | <b>Phoneticb> alphabets, wordlists, texts, word frequency |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet: Alpha Bravo Charlie Delta Echo Foxtrot Golf Hotel India Juliet Kilo Lima Mike November Oscar Papa Quebec Romeo Sierra Tango Uniform Victor Whiskey Xray Yankee Zulu ITU version: Alfa Juliett X-ray |  | | Saratov for Russian Morse code, the alphabet generally and Gagarin. |  | | About John Alcorn's book (QZ codes, phonetics, Morse etc.). |
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http://www.bckelk.uklinux.net/menu.html
(311 words)
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| | ShepWeb: <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet |
 | | <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet, Military Alphabet, Miliary Alphabet Code, <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet, radiotelephony spelling alphabet |
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http://www.ashep.com/sw/phoneticAlphabet.html
(72 words)
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| | Flight Sim Forums -> AViation <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet |
 | | I was training by the <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet though, just slightly different. |  | | AViation <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet, for ppl who still dont know all of them |  | | i'm afraid if i started talking in the <b>phoneticb> language this topic will end up in the nonsense form. |
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http://www.fs2004.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=16543
(325 words)
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| | <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet |
 | | The effects of noise, weak signals, distorted audio, and radio operator accent are reduced through use of the <b>phoneticb> alphabet. |  | | What letters other than "d" and "b" could be confused if the <b>phoneticb> alphabet is not used? |  | | The <b>phoneticb> alphabet is used primarily used in two-way radio communications. |
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http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/MAEL/ag/phonetic.htm
(296 words)
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| | North Anglia Manual Chapter 2 |
 | | The accepted <b>phoneticb> alphabet in use throughout the radio world is the <b>NATOb> one. |  | | We all know a <b>phoneticb> alphabet of one sort or another. |  | | The content may not mean anything to you but it will to the person receiving it. |
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http://www.kevin.kent.btinternet.co.uk/nar/manual/narman2.htm
(399 words)
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| | RollingStone.com: Wilco : Wilco Settle Sample Suit : News |
 | | The sample, used in the distortion-laced outtro to the song "Poor Places," is taken from The Conet Project: Recordings of Shortwave Numbers Stations's "<b>Phoneticb> Alphabet <b>Natob>," which consists of a woman's voice repeating the words "yankee, hotel, foxtrot" in a monotone for ninety seconds. |  | | Wilco have settled a lawsuit filed in the U.K. by progressive electronic label Irdial-Discs over the sample that spawned the title of the band's 2002 album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. |
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http://rollingstone.com/news/story/_/pageid/rs.Home/pageregion/.../id/6199407
(173 words)
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| | cannes.ca - RAF <b>phoneticb> alphabet |
 | | Law gwil@mindspring.com 1 May 1997 ***** ENGLISH ***** The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet: Alpha Bravo... |  | | Believed to be operated by MI6 from sites including RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus... |
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http://cannes.ca/RAF-phonetic-alphabet/reference/fullview/wikipedia/197442
(173 words)
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| | Amateur Radio Operating Aids |
 | | Standard ITU <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet - Sometimes referred to as <b>NATOb> Phonetics |  | | <b>Phoneticb> Alphabets -- Historic, English and others -- via J.W.Alcorn - VK2JWA |  | | DXers Phonetics --By AC6V - Unofficial Of Course! |
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http://www.ac6v.com/opaids.htm
(1714 words)
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| | Alpha Bravo or Able Baker? |
 | | The almost universally used English International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet was adopted in 1955 for use by international air traffic control, maritime, police, military (<b>NATOb>), and other users of radio and telephone communication: |  | | For a comprehensive account of the many standards that have existed over the years see <b>phoneticb> alphabets. |  | | In 1972, while working in the Research Department of British Telecom (at that time called Post Office Telecommunications), I circulated the following "new <b>phoneticb> alphabet standard" in a memo as a joke. |
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http://home.earthlink.net/~malcolmhamer/alpha.htm
(153 words)
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| | India |
 | | India is also the letter I in the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet |  | | Music (Carnatic, Hindustani, Indi-pop), Film & TV (Bollywood), Indian TV Stations Literature, Cuisine, Holidays, Folklore, Dance, Architecture; Education, Languages, Media |  | | Soap opera "Santa Barbara" final show on NBC TV |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/i/in/india.html
(2546 words)
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| | International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet on Almondnet |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet was developed in the 1950s to be intelligible (and pronounceable) to all... |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet is now widely used in business and telecommunications... |  | | a notational standard for the <b>phoneticb> representation of all languages - the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (also IPA). |
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http://www.breast-reduction-surgery.co.uk/surgery/international_phonetic_alphabet.html
(499 words)
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| | Halfbakery: Better <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet |
 | | I believe that we could really use a better one than the <b>NATOb> alphabet and others in use. |  | | A certain [Mickey the Fish] proposed a new phonetic alphabet that was meant to be a joke. |  | | I base mine more on the Greek (alpha, beta, gamma) alphabet and much less on the <b>NATOb> (alfa, bravo, charlie) alphabet, but with substantial variation to avoid similar-sounding letter names (mu, nu, zeta, eta, theta). |
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http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/Better_20Phonetic_20Alphabet
(547 words)
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| | India |
 | | India is also the letter I in the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet |  | | These are the Dravidian languages of Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, and Telugu, and the Indo-Aryan languages of Bengali, Marathi, Urdu, Gujarati, Oriya, Punjabi, Assamese, Kashmiri, Sindhi, Nepali, Konkani and the classical language of Sanskrit. |  | | Many other languages belonging to both groups are spoken as well. |
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http://united-states.asinah.net/american-encyclopedia/wikipedia/i/in/india.html
(547 words)
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| | N. Who is N? What is N? Where is N? Definition of N. Meaning of N. |
 | | November represents the letter N in the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet. |  | | N is the fourteenth letter of the modern Latin alphabet. |  | | Semitic Nûn was probably the picture of a snake; the sound value of the letter was /n/- as in Greek, Etruscan, Latin and all modern languages. |
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http://www.knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedia/N
(547 words)
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| | <b>Phoneticb> - Definition of <b>Phoneticb> by Webster's Online Dictionary |
 | | alphabet military <b>phoneticb> alphabet <b>natob> <b>phoneticb> phonetic transcription <b>phoneticb> symbol korean phrases in <b>phoneticb> <b>natob> <b>phoneticb> alphabet <b>phoneticb> spelling of names <b>phoneticb> spelling <b>phoneticb> pronunciation of the lords prayer in aramaic military <b>phoneticb> alphabet police <b>phoneticb> alphabet <b>phoneticb> symbols <b>phoneticb> international <b>phoneticb> alphabet <b>phoneticb> name <b>phoneticb> alphabet |  | | <b>Phoneticb> - Definition of <b>Phoneticb> by Webster's Online Dictionary |  | | In three weeks you can teach yourself a complete <b>phoneticb> reading program. |
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http://www.webster-dictionary.org/definition/Phonetic
(547 words)
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| | Politics and modern events FAQ |
 | | There is no official <b>NATOb> publication containing the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet: this is becase "<b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet" is actually the common name for the Radiotelephony spelling alphabet of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) which has been adopted by the military of each <b>NATOb> country. |  | | As you can see, there actually is not much standardization of <b>phoneticb> alphabets in fact, though there is more in practice. |  | | What is the complete <b>NATOb> official <b>phoneticb> alphabet (Alpha, Bravo... |
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http://www.answerbag.com/c_view.php/578
(547 words)
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| | What is the complete <b>NATOb> official <b>phoneticb> alphabet (Alpha, Bravo... Zulu)? : Politics and modern events information from Answerbag |
 | | There is no official <b>NATOb> publication containing the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet: this is becase "<b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet" is actually the common name for the Radiotelephony spelling alphabet of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) which has been adopted by the military of each <b>NATOb> country. |  | | The following links are for information on the <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet specifically, which is what the question asked for. |  | | **Sources for <b>NATOb> (not U.S. Military) <b>phoneticb> alphabet**: |
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http://www.answerbag.com/q_view.php/2669
(761 words)
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| | <b>Phoneticb> alphabet - International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet - Factbites |
 | | The most commonly used <b>phoneticb> alphabet today is that adopted by <b>NATOb> in The spelling used for the alphabet here and the phonetics for digits are as |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet was developed in the 1950s to be intelligible (and pronounceable) |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet is a common name for the international radiotelephony spelling |
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http://webinfofeed.com/wifd/phonetic-alphabet.htm
(410 words)
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| | What is the complete <b>NATOb> official <b>phoneticb> alphabet (Alpha, Bravo... Zulu)? : Politics and modern events |
 | | There is no official <b>NATOb> publication containing the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet: this is becase "<b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet" is actually the common name for the Radiotelephony spelling alphabet of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) which has been adopted by the military of each <b>NATOb> country. |  | | What is the complete <b>NATOb> official <b>phoneticb> alphabet (Alpha, Bravo... |  | | The following links are for information on the <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet specifically, which is what the question asked for. |
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http://www.answerbag.com/q_view.php/2669
(788 words)
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| | <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The century older International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet (IPA) is often confused with the <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet due to their similar names. |  | | The final version given in the table above was implemented by the ICAO on March 1, 1956, and was undoubtedly adopted shortly thereafter by the ITU, because it appears in the 1959 Radio Regulations as an established <b>phoneticb> alphabet. |  | | Several letter codes and abbreviations using the <b>phoneticb> alphabet have become well-known, such as Bravo Zulu (letter code BZ) for "well done" [2], Checkpoint Charlie (Checkpoint C) in Berlin, and Zulu for Greenwich Mean Time or Coordinated Universal Time. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niner
(2092 words)
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| | BBC - h2g2 - The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet |
 | | The <b>phoneticb> alphabet is a system created by the <b>NATOb> (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)allies in the 1950s that would be intelligible and pronounceable to all <b>NATOb> allies in the heat of battle. |  | | The reason that any <b>phoneticb> alphabet is, or was, used was to stop confusion, because telephone, radio and walkie-talkie communications had the habit of crackling over long distances, blotting out whole words or even sentences. |  | | The <b>NATOb> <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet is not the only <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet in use, but it definitely is the one used by the most people and countries. |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ww2/A4342934
(2092 words)
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| | International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet [Definition] |
 | | The <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabetThe <b>NATOb> <b>phoneticb> alphabet is a common name for the radiotelephony spelling alphabet of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), which assigned words to the letters of the English alphabet so that critical combinations of letters could be pronounced and understood by aircrew and air traffic controllers regardless of their native language. |  | | Retroflex consonants identified by the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet: Note: In the International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet, the symbols for retroflex consonants are typically the same as for the alveolar consonants, but with the addition of a right-facing hook to the bottom of the symbol.... |  | | Albright, Robert W. The International <b>Phoneticb> Alphabet: Its background and development. |
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http://www.wikimirror.com/International_Phonetic_Alphabet
(2092 words)
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