Save our ship
The "S" in SOS stands for "save." SOS is a distress signal that is used internationally to signal that someone is in need of help.
The abbreviation for a distress signal is DS or SOS.
SOS means Save Our Ship, which is a distress signal used obviously by ships in distress at the ocean.
SOS
sos
The Maritime distress signal, SOS, was a grouping of letters which stood for nothing in particular.It was a simple and easy sequence of code to remember. Later it became associated with terms such as, Save Our Souls or Save our Ship, and probably others. However, these were only unofficial designations.Related Information:It was first used by the Germans, sometime prior to 1906. The letters, SOS, in a linked, indefinitely repeating sequence (no breaks) in Morse code, became the international distress signal in 1908. The use of the SOS distress signal was replaced, in 1999, by the Global Maritime Distress Safety System.
There is no full for SOS, but it is a distress signal in the Morse code, which goes like this : (· · · - - - · · ·)
The SOS number is a universal distress signal used in emergencies to request help.
SOS is a Morse code distress signal commonly used in emergencies at sea. It was introduced by the German government in radio regulations in 1905 as a standard distress signal, but does not actually stand for any specific words. Instead, it was chosen for its simplicity and ease of recognition.
The first SOS distress signal was transmitted by the RMS Titanic on April 15, 1912, during its sinking after hitting an iceberg. The ship's radio operators sent out the distress signal to alert nearby vessels for help. The SOS signal, which consists of three dots, three dashes, and three dots, was later adopted as the international standard for maritime distress calls.
Save Our Soul
SOS, the international Morse code distress signal, is a palindrome.