Finnish Armed Forces radio alphabet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Finnish Defence Forces switched over to the NATO phonetic alphabet in 2005, but the Finnish one is used for Å, Ä, Ö and digits.[1] International operations use only the NATO alphabet.
Letter | Code word | Meaning |
---|---|---|
A | Aarne | male name |
B | Bertta | female name |
C | Celsius | Swedish scientist Anders Celsius |
D | Daavid | male name |
E | Eemeli | male name |
F | Faarao | Finnish for 'pharaoh' |
G | Gideon | biblical name |
H | Heikki | male name |
I | Iivari | male name |
J | Jussi | male name |
K | Kalle | male name |
L | Lauri | male name |
M | Matti | male name |
N | Niilo | male name |
O | Otto | male name |
P | Paavo | male name |
Q | kuu | Finnish name of the letter q, also Finnish for 'moon' |
R | Risto | male name |
S | Sakari | male name |
T | Tyyne | female name |
U | Urho | male name, also Finnish for 'hero' |
V | Vihtori | male name |
W | Viski | Finnish for whisky |
X | äksä | Finnish name of the letter x |
Y | Yrjö | male name |
Z | zeta | Finnish name of the letter z |
Å | Åke | Swedish male name |
Ä | äiti | mother |
Ö | öljy | oil |
On the Finnish rail network the Finnish Armed Forces spelling alphabet was used until May 31, 2020 and starting on July 1 the railways switched to NATO phonetic alphabet, but still retained Finnish spelling words for Å, Ä, Ö and numbers.[2]
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.