The Swedish Armed Forces' radio alphabet was a radiotelephony alphabet made up of Swedish two-syllable male names with the exception of Z which is just the name of the letter as pronounced in Swedish.

The Swedish Armed Forces are since 2006 instructed to use the NATO alphabet instead of the original Swedish alphabet, along with and adaptation of the NATO voice procedures to communicate, since most activity is in various international UN and NATO missions. This has been changed back again since the administrative authorities are required to use the Swedish language according to Swedish law even the Swedish Armed Forces.

The alphabet is also used for civil communications in Sweden, one example being local flights operating under VFR.

LetterWordPronunciation
AAdam
BBertil
CCesar
DDavid
EErik
FFilip[ˈfilip]
GGustav
HHelge
IIvar
JJohan[ˈjʊan]
KKalle[²kalɛ]
LLudvig
MMartin
NNiklas
OOlof[²uːlɔf], [ˈuːlɔf]
PPetter
QQvintus
RRudolf
SSigurd
TTore
UUrban
VViktor
WWilhelm
XXerxes[ˈksɛ̌rksɛs]
YYngve
ZZäta[ˈsɛːta]
ÅÅke[ˈoːˌkɛ]
ÄÄrlig[ˈæːˌɭɪɡ]
ÖÖsten
DigitWordPronunciation
1Ett[ɛt]
2Tvåa
3Trea
4Fyra[ˈfyːˌra]
5Femma
6Sexa
7Sju[ɧʉː]
8Åtta[ˈɔtːa]
9Nia
0Nolla
SymbolWordPronunciation
Decimal
point
Komma[²kɔma]
ÜÜber

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.