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Whiskey tango foxtrot : the real language of the modern American military / Alan Axelrod.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Skyhorse Publishing, c2013.Description: vii, 212 p. ; 18 cmISBN:
  • 1620876477 (pbk.)
  • 9781620876473 (pbk.)
Other title:
  • WTF, the real language of the modern American military
  • Real language of the modern American military
Subject(s):
Contents:
Slang, military -- Behind the butt plate: living the GI life -- Cake eaters and chicken guts: military courtesy and command authority -- After women or liquor: conduct unbecoming but completely understandable -- Bang-bang, beans, bullets, bandages & badguys: fighting words -- Burn before reading: military intelligence and other oxymorons -- Broken arrows and spastic plastic: language built to the highest military specs.
Summary: Explores military slang, explaining acronyms, words, and phrases in a text arranged by topic.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 427.973 A969 Available 33111007455476
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Few areas of human endeavor have produced more--or more colorful--terms than has the military. Soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen have over centuries come up with words, phrases, and acronyms to express everything from raw emotion to complex technology. The military is both a distinctive way of life and a community, and a command of its slang is essential to admission to full membership within the group.

Most military slang is almost always familiar only to the troops. Mating mosquitoes , for example, refers to the two-chevron insignia of the Army corporal. Gadget describes an enlisted man or woman who is temporarily promoted to a position of increased responsibility to fill an urgent need, while a panty raid is a foray into enemy territory for the purpose of gathering evidence of adversary activity.

Among the less delicate entries are the day the eagle shits , or payday, and skimmer puke , a submariner's term for any surface ship sailor. (And then there's the book's title, the acronym for What The F-ck ).

Many elements of military vocabulary have become part of our national speech: John Wayne , boondocks , attaboy , and hot dog . But whether the words and phrases are the exclusive property of our fighting men and women or are also in general use, the "real" language of the modern military set forth in this lively book embodies a uniquely American attitude and an exuberantly colloquial, unwaveringly honest, and enduringly American grace under pressure.

Slang, military -- Behind the butt plate: living the GI life -- Cake eaters and chicken guts: military courtesy and command authority -- After women or liquor: conduct unbecoming but completely understandable -- Bang-bang, beans, bullets, bandages & badguys: fighting words -- Burn before reading: military intelligence and other oxymorons -- Broken arrows and spastic plastic: language built to the highest military specs.

Explores military slang, explaining acronyms, words, and phrases in a text arranged by topic.

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