Yes. The U.S. Army's Signal Corps famously lucked out in October of 1918 when their Blue Check hen (named Cher Ami, French for 'dear friend' in the masculine) heroically delivered a messsage from the now-famous "Lost Battalion", who was not only surrounded by the enemy, but was also being artillery-barraged by friendly fire. She'd been shot through the breast, blinded in one eye, and the message capsule was attached to her left leg- which was itself barely still attached by one ligament.
they used pigeons
The use of pigeons for communication dates back millennia, from use in Ancient Greece to communicate the results of the Olympic Games, to use by Genghis Khan, Napoleon, and the Crusaders to communicate from battlefields. Historians don't have the fact but it was most likely that he used pigeons for carrying messages.
The sound that a pigeon makes is called a coo. It is a soft, repetitive, and soothing sound that pigeons use to communicate with each other.
obviously not, you got carrier pigeons, sign language and telephones.
Carrier pigeons No, it was his British allies: & few thanks we, the British got for it, too. & Yes, I mean de Gaulle used the British to communicate with France.
Pigeons communicate by chirping. Or I don't know about this, but they might poo.
Yes because they were always on drone
people use words to communicate and talk
People use all the letters of the alphabet to communicate. They use the letters to forms words. Words by convention have meanings which are used to communicate.
Pigeons see people as predators.
Smoke signals and carrier pigeons. Or possibly even the telephone.
u can communicate with people...