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Procedure word
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Procedure word
Procedure words (abbreviated to prowords) are words or phrases limited to radiotelephony procedure used to facilitate communication by conveying information in a condensed standard verbal format. Prowords are voice versions of the much older procedural signs for Morse code which were first developed in the 1860s for Morse telegraphy, and their meaning is identical.
The NATO communications manual ACP-125 contains the most formal and perhaps earliest modern (post-World War II) glossary of prowords, but its definitions have been adopted by many other organizations, including the United Nations Development Programme, the U.S. Coast Guard, US Civil Air Patrol, US Military Auxiliary Radio System, and others.
Prowords are one of several structured parts of radio voice procedures, including brevity codes and plain language radio checks.
According to the U.S. Marine Corps training document FMSO 108, "understanding the following PROWORDS and their respective definitions is the key to clear and concise communication procedures".
This transmission is from the station whose designator immediately follows. For clarity, the station called should be named before the station calling. So, "Victor Juliet zero, THIS IS Golf Mike Oscar three...", or for brevity, "Victor Juliet zero, Golf Mike Oscar three, ...". One can never say, "This is GMO3 calling VJ0".[citation needed]
"This is the end of my transmission to you and a response is necessary. Go ahead: transmit."
"Over" and "Out" are never used at the same time, since their meanings are mutually exclusive. With spring-loaded Push to talk (PTT) buttons on modern combined transceivers, the same meaning can be communicated with just "OUT", as in "Ops, Alpha, ETA five minutes. OUT."[clarification needed]
"This is the end of my transmission to you and no answer is required or expected."[citation needed]
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Procedure word AI simulator
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Procedure word
Procedure words (abbreviated to prowords) are words or phrases limited to radiotelephony procedure used to facilitate communication by conveying information in a condensed standard verbal format. Prowords are voice versions of the much older procedural signs for Morse code which were first developed in the 1860s for Morse telegraphy, and their meaning is identical.
The NATO communications manual ACP-125 contains the most formal and perhaps earliest modern (post-World War II) glossary of prowords, but its definitions have been adopted by many other organizations, including the United Nations Development Programme, the U.S. Coast Guard, US Civil Air Patrol, US Military Auxiliary Radio System, and others.
Prowords are one of several structured parts of radio voice procedures, including brevity codes and plain language radio checks.
According to the U.S. Marine Corps training document FMSO 108, "understanding the following PROWORDS and their respective definitions is the key to clear and concise communication procedures".
This transmission is from the station whose designator immediately follows. For clarity, the station called should be named before the station calling. So, "Victor Juliet zero, THIS IS Golf Mike Oscar three...", or for brevity, "Victor Juliet zero, Golf Mike Oscar three, ...". One can never say, "This is GMO3 calling VJ0".[citation needed]
"This is the end of my transmission to you and a response is necessary. Go ahead: transmit."
"Over" and "Out" are never used at the same time, since their meanings are mutually exclusive. With spring-loaded Push to talk (PTT) buttons on modern combined transceivers, the same meaning can be communicated with just "OUT", as in "Ops, Alpha, ETA five minutes. OUT."[clarification needed]
"This is the end of my transmission to you and no answer is required or expected."[citation needed]