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📻

Amateur Radio Communications

HAM radio operators use phonetic alphabets for callsigns and message exchanges.

Prisijungimo nereikia

Used by aviation, military, and international communication. Standard since 1956.

Spoken form

hHoteleEcholLimalLimaoOscar-(dash)wWhiskeyoOscarrRomeolLimadDelta

Hotel Echo Lima Lima Oscar (dash) Whiskey Oscar Romeo Lima Delta

Full NATO (ICAO) alphabet
0Zero
1One
2Two
3Tree
4Fower
5Five
6Six
7Seven
8Eight
9Niner
AAlfa
BBravo
CCharlie
DDelta
EEcho
FFoxtrot
GGolf
HHotel
IIndia
JJuliett
KKilo
LLima
MMike
NNovember
OOscar
PPapa
QQuebec
RRomeo
SSierra
TTango
UUniform
VVictor
WWhiskey
XX-ray
YYankee
ZZulu

💡 Use cases: clearly communicating confirmation codes over the phone, spelling out passwords in customer service, reading license plates over radio, pilot communications, and any voice channel where letter confusion (B vs D vs P) is costly.

HAM Radio tips

📻

HAM operators worldwide use the NATO alphabet for callsign identification and Q-code message exchange.

💡

For DX (long-distance) contacts where signals are weak, phonetic spelling ensures your callsign is logged correctly.

🎯

Some operators use creative variants ("Italy" for I, "Spain" for S). NATO is the cross-language standard.

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