squad names

what were the names of US squads the only ones i know are able, baker, charlie.

Fox…Easy…they are the only ones that come to mind.

This is phonetic alphabet used by U.S. forces in december 1941:
Able, Baker, Charlie, Dog, Easy, Fox, George, How, Item, Jig, King, Love, Mike, Nan, Oboe, Peter, Queen, Roger, Sail, Tare, Uncle, Victor, William, X-Ray, Yoke, Zebra.

ok thank you

KOVALSKI"

You know your A-B-C’s The only letter that I question is the " T ".

In World War Two T was SUGAR – not tare.

Perhaps in 1941 it was tare. I didn’t get involved in WWII communications until 1943.

KOVALSKI:

SORRY !!! Obviously I don’t know MY A-B-C’s.

I was trying to say S was SUGAR – not sail. But got my S’s and T’s mixed up.

Well we can’t always know our A, B, C’s…Anyone know of the Phonetic Alpabet used bby the German Weremacht?
Likely to be mispelt

vcs-ww2,

I found that alphabet via internet. I’m not familiarised with radio communications. I guess you are the expert here. :wink:
So maybe you know the answers for my questions.
How many times that alphabet changed during the war?
Was one alphabet in common use of navy, air force, army and marines, or each of them had its own alphabet?

Being a scaley i’d thought i’d post the modern NATO version, which i’m sure many of you are familiar with

A=Alpha
B=Bravo
C=Charlie
D=Delta
E=Echo
F=Foxtrot
G=Golf
H=Hotel
I=India
J=Juliet
K=Kilo
L=Lima
M=Mike
N=November
O=Oscar
P=Papa
Q=Quebec
R=Romeo
S=Sierra
T=Tango
U=Uniform
V=Victor
W=Whisky
X=X-Ray
Y=Yankee
Z=Zulu