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1775.
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a : alpha, 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 : romeo, s : sierra, t : tango, u : uniform, v : victor, w : whiskey, x : xray, y : yankee, z : zulu
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Translators: this is a structure to assist in the generation of
spoken military-style spelling. For example, 'abc' becomes 'alpha
bravo charlie'.
It is a simple structure that consists of pairs of
letter : word(s)
where the letter and word(s) are separate by colons and each
pair is separated by commas. For example, we see:
a : alpha, b : bravo, c : charlie,
And so on. The complete set should consist of all the letters from
the alphabet for your language paired with the common
military/phonetic word(s) used to describe that letter.
The Wikipedia entry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_phonetic_alphabet has a few
interesting tidbits about local conventions in the sections
"Additions in German, Danish and Norwegian" and "Variants".
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a : anton, b : bernard, c : cornelis, d : dirk, e : eduard, f : ferdinand, g : gerard, h : hendrik, i : izaak, j : johannes, k : karel, l : lodewijk, m : maria, n : nico, o : otto, p : pieter, q : quirinus, r : rudolf, s : simon, t : tinus, u : utrecht, v : victor, w : willem, x : xantippe, y : ypsilon, z : zacharias
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