Understanding Australian Military Speak
Unlock the Past
- SKU:
- UTP0525
- Availability:
- Usually Ships Within 7 Days
Media: BOOK - paperback, 72 pages
Author: N. Smith
Year: 2016
ISBN: 9781925323559
Other: b&w & colour photos
Publisher: Unlock the Past
Recent years have witnessed unprecedented efforts by family and other historians to dig out more and more information on Australia's rich military heritage and especially on those who served. This groundswell of interest follows on from milestones such as the centenary of the Boer War and World War I.
As a result, historians now seem to be surrounded by an ever expanding plethora of records, most of which they find are digitised. That's were the problem can start. The task of understanding military records is fraught with the difficulties of grappling with and interpreting among other matters, military speak, acronyms, initialisms and abbreviations.
Naturally the military has to employ abbreviations and the like which are unique to the Art of War, and that is what it is all about. Failure to be concise, efficient and readily understood within the military machine means that the transition from Peace to War will be jeapardised with any system of military speak which promises less. Therefore, to get the most from military records, be they related to personnel, tactical, equipment, procedural, organisational or operational matters, a grasp of the military abbreviations likely to be encountered is highly advisable.
This book fills the need by detailing 6000 abbreviations, initialisms and acronyms found in Australian military records from 1788 to the present day.
Contents:
Introduction
Abbreviations A-Y
ALSO AVAILABLE
MORE MILITARY PRODUCTS
- Australian ebooks
- All Australian Military titles - books, data CDs and ebooks
- All International Military titles - books, data CDs and ebooks
3 Reviews
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Australian Military Speak
With being involved with researching service persons for a War Grave Group and Honour Roll Boards this book is of much help
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My New Go-To
This little book now sits beside my computer. As I am researching my family's Military heritage, Neil Smith's book has become an essential interpretive tool. Oh, and if you're wondering about the 4-star rating...? I have learned that nothing is ever perfect in the Indexing world.
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Money well spent
I found “Understanding Australian Military Speak” was very helpful in deciphering the acronyms and abbreviations used in military records for my grand relatives and my father who served in WW1 And WW2