Alpha, Bravo, are simply the letters A & B. Baker is the old WWII term for the letter "B." In Vietnam it was "Bravo." The letter "E" in WWII may have been "Easy" (like in the comic book days (1960's) of SGT Rock of "Easy Company"), in Vietnam it was "Echo."
Those are for the military alphabet. They are not call signs. A call sign is (or was) a combination of characters; and is assigned to you by higher command...you don't get to choose your own call sign (except in rare cases).
A military call sign is simply identifying who you are. It is used in place of a name. Instead of saying over the telephone, "Hi Mike, this is John." In the military its, "Mike 27 this is Yankee 6, over." The word "Over" is saying to you, it's your turn to speak. "Out" means "end of conversation." Which is why so many military veterans don't like to watch Hollywood War Movies...they keep using improper radio procedures, "Over and Out!" Which literally means, "Go ahead talk and shut up."
names of soldiers at omaha beach
There are too many names to count or write!!But some names are emeerson,kelly,kayleyand paige.
A roster of names of supposed communists was a "Blacklist"
Crusiers were names for cities
the names of the atomic bombs were Fatman and little boy
Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Foxtrot, Elephant, Guerrilla, etc.. look up military alphabet. - EDIT by separate user: Its Alpha Bravo Charlie Delta Echo Foxtrot Golf Hilo India etc.... It's phonetics. (<- that's correcting the OP.) However, that's just the alphabet. Squad names are made up by the squad members them selves. They can consist of the alphabet plus some numbers or be some sort of animal or something. separate user: all i know is... alpha beta bravo charlie delta echo elite foxtrot... then Zulu at the end
Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, and Echo
The alphabet from the Greek Alpha and Beta (α,Α - β,Β)
If the list of names run out in a hurricane season, then the Greek alphabet is used to name storms. This system was only used once, in the 2005 hurricane season, where Wilma was followed by storms names Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon, and Zeta.
Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo, Foxtrot, Guerrilla, Hotel, Indigo, Juliet, Kilo, Lion?, Mike, and i can name the rest Z: Zulu...
The alphabet is a mixture. THE WORD "ALPHABET": The word is from the Latin alphabetum, which came from the Greek alphabetos, a mixture of the names of the Greek letters alpha (Α, α) and beta (Β β). These were the first two letters of the Phoenician alphabet, meaning ox and house. THE ALPHABET: The alphabet contains various input from various cultures and previous writing systems; such would qualify an alphabet as a mixture. CONCLUSION: The alphabet, in all respects, is a mixture.
Yes, hurricanes were given names before 1953. They were given the names used for the letters in the military code. I can not remember most of them: A, Alpha; B, Bravo; C, Charlie; D, Delta;E, Easy, F, Fox...K, Kilo; L, Lima...
Those are the names of the first three letters of the Greek alphabet. They are the first three letters of the official modern Greek alphabet and also have many combinations in various subjects, extending all the way from study to games!
There are two very different things called "the international phonetic alphabet." The International Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet is a set of words used in place of the names of letters to facilitate spelling words or arbitrary sequences of letters and numbers such as serial numbers. Alpha Bravo Charlie Delta Echo Foxtrot Golf Hotel India Juliet Kilo Lima Mike November Oscar Papa Quito Romeo Sierra Tango Uniform Victor Whiskey X-Ray Yankee Zulu Also, the digit 9 is spoken as "niner" to reduce confusion with the digit 5.
Paddy and Marcel, also their names are not alpha and omega, their names are Kate and Humphrey.
That refers to the stars that look brightest, from our point of view. These brightest stars usually have names such as alpha, beta, gamma, etc., i.e., the first letters of the Greek alphabet.
The word "code" in the military is for communication via radio, etc. Such as Bravo 26, or Mike 1 Alpha. The military uses the "phonetic alphabet" to avoid confusion over the radio. The letter "B" can sound like the letter "C' or "D" or "E", so we use Bravo, Charley, Delta, or Echo. The Viet Cong (VC, the "guerilla" enemy) or the North Vietnamese Army (NVA, the regular army enemy) were referred to as "Victor Charley" and "November Victor Alpha." The phonetic alphabet then breaks down into far more complicated codes, to avoid detection by enemy personnel. Those enter the category of Military Intelligence/Communications. If your question is about military operations in the Vietnam War, there's a list of nearly a hundred of them. See; Category: Battles and Operations of the Vietnam War.