Aces High Bulletin Board
Help and Support Forums => Help and Training => Topic started by: Dingbat on September 23, 2002, 12:20:56 PM
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Is there a difinitive guide on lingo in AH? like what does CC mean other than carbon copy in email :p
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heres a short list of lingo
cc=copy command
rtb = return to base
vulch = kill on take of or landing
bnz= boom and zoom
HO-= head on attack
jabo = dive bomb attack (i think)
afg= away fromg game (as in running ah in background)
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Originally posted by Dingbat
Is there a difinitive guide on lingo in AH? like what does CC mean other than carbon copy in email :p
An extremely comprehensive list can be found here: http://www.netaces.org/ahradio/abbrev.html#title - in fact, this is an excellent site for all aspects of AH! :)
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You forgot to put "dweeb" in your list. It, of course, means anyone who just shot you down. It can also refer to the plane that said individual was piloting at the time that they shot you down.
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Sling you dweeb! :)
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jabo = dive bomb attack (i think)
Within the game ee tend to use "Jabo" as a verb meaning "to ground attack" but it is really a noun. Jabo is an abbreviation of Jagdbomber which is German for fighter-bomber.
Brought to you care of the pointless trivia dept.
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forgot
b* of the skys
its NOD2000 in his b26
AND DONT YOU FORGET IT
hurc is a hurricane mk 2 c
dweeb is a person in a spit or 262
hurr is hurricane mk 1
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Since we're at it:
runstang = P51
nikiddie = N1K2 driver
dweebfire = spit
Lala = La7
Luftwabble = any German plane and driver
= Salute
Anybody got any other colorful names for planes?
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Not very colourfull but more or less used though:
pony d/b = P-51 D or B version
tiffy = Typhoon
niki = N1K2
zero / zeke = A6M2 / A6M5 (actually the A6M5 was only a zeke while the A6M2 and A6M3 were zeros, but nobody cares about that)
stuka = dive bomber (like the D3A) no fighter bomber (i.e. a usual fighter carrying bombs)
And some most likely germans may call the 262 a "Schwalbe" and the 110 a "Wildsau".
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Originally posted by jonnyb
Since we're at it:
runstang = P51
nikiddie = N1K2 driver
dweebfire = spit
Lala = La7
Luftwabble = any German plane and driver
= Salute
Anybody got any other colorful names for planes?
run-ninety = 190
run-o-nine = 109
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Ok shameful admissions time. Been flying sims since the AW GEnie days. Still unsure after all this time what the following terms mean:
Roped
Cherry Picked
- SEAGOON
BTW - Any others terms related to ACM we've forgotten? BTW - ACM = Air Combat Maneuvers.
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Here are some others....
LOL - laugh out loud
hehehehehe - laughing
ROTFLMAO - roll on the floor laughing my A** off
Stupidhead - ....
Wait, that last one is mine.. :D
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Seagoon:
Roped is a term used to describe a maneuver that occurs when you as a higher energy fighter pull into a vertical climb, luring your lower energy opponent to follow you. When he stalls out, you nose over and end up on his 6. He has been "roped", or "rope-a-doped".
Cherry picked is used to describe when a fighter drops down onto a low and slow...or damaged...aircraft and scores the easy kill. Basically, any time your opponent can do nothing about the situation...like being on the ground, deadstick, whatever, and you kill him, you went cherry picking.
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Thanks Jonnyb. I at least understand what has been happened to me so many times!
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se us "ca" for crappy assist :D
bockk
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You sometimes see "roach" and "roaches" for ground vehicles (usually in reference to a field with lot's of M16/osties defending it).
I also sometimes use "rockphoon" for a typhoon armed with rockets (one of my favourite rides for killing "roaches" :)).
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Two terms I heard for the first time last night, from a squaddie - I liked them so much they are now in my permanent AH vocab book.
whoofies - rockets (cos they go whooooof)
poofs - bombs (cos they go poof!)
also -
goons - Troops as dropped from c47/m3 also used to refer to vehicle 'I'll bring a goon' - He will bring a c47 or m3 with troops.
Pansy - Panzer
porked - broken, not working
Ronson - any planes that light up first time (esp burning Zekes)(orig. used by Afrika Korps to describe sherman tanks)
And IIRC, cc is a text version of 'click-click' (pressing your transmit button twice to acknowledge message)
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I believe it was the Brits who called the Shermans Ronsons (after the lighters) and the krauts called them Tommy Cookers, but I might be wrong.
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I heard that Ronson one third hand from the telly, so I will defer, indeed 'Tommy Cookers' is a lot more appropriate...
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heres a short list of lingo
cc=copy command
rtb = return to base
vulch = kill on take of or landing
bnz= boom and zoom
HO-= head on attack
jabo = dive bomb attack (i think)
afg= away fromg game (as in running ah in background)
'cc' is actually 'click click', the typing analog of the historical practice of clicking your microphone switch twice to acknowledge receipt of a radio message.
'vulch' is a construct from 'vulture', backformed to 'vulcher' -- someone who sits over an airfield to attack people taking off or landing.
'jabo' is from the German 'jagdbomber', or 'fighter-bomber', which they turned into slang as 'jaborei' and 'jabo' -- a fighter armed with air-to-ground ordnance.
Cherry picked is used to describe when a fighter drops down onto a low and slow...or damaged...aircraft and scores the easy kill. Basically, any time your opponent can do nothing about the situation...like being on the ground, deadstick, whatever, and you kill him, you went cherry picking.
It also carries the connotation that you sit up above a furball waiting for the 'perfect' kill -- the ones you can get without having to work hard at, like waiting to catch people extending for alt at the top where they turn and are out of E, someone exiting with a smoking engine, etc. Not quite as bad as vulching, but cherry pickers and vulchers work over similar populations of targets; vulchers are always over airfields or spawn points, while cherry pickers can hover over anywhere there's a fight.
goons - Troops as dropped from c47/m3 also used to refer to vehicle 'I'll bring a goon' - He will bring a c47 or m3 with troops.
A 'goon' is a 'Gooney Bird' -- the C-47, normally used in reference to its use as a troop transport for field capture.
porked - broken, not working
Along with virtually every other reference to having been shafted that won't trigger the textradio vulgarity check software on the server. 'Scrod', 'hosed' 'TU', 'Tango Uniform', etc. are all used by different groups.
A lot of the slang used online is pulled from various actual pilot usage; you can find lists by putting 'pilot slang' into search engines. Some sites (some of the slang dates from post-WWII usage, so some terms aren't appropriate for AH -- i.e., 'Fox Two'):
http://www.warbirdsresourcegroup.org/URG/glossary.html
http://www.warbirdsresourcegroup.org/LRG/terms.html
http://students.db.erau.edu/~goldenl/flying.htm
http://www.acm.cps.msu.edu/~kortasma/raf.html
http://www.tailhook.org/AVSLANG.htm
http://www.simhq.com/simhq3/sims/air_combat/brevity/
http://www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Maze/2849/dif/ab_term.htm
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From the Aces High Help file [manual] :
Common Acronyms
afaik - as far as I know
afk - away from keyboard
capped field - combat air patrol over the field
cc - click-click of the mic (message received)
cons - enemy contacts
drunks - paratroopers used for capturing fields
fyi - for your information
goon - the C-47A aircraft
ho - head on collision
imho - in my humble opinion
lanc - the Lancaster III bomber
np - no problem
otw - on the way
prepped field - field is prepared for capture
rtb - return(ing) to base
tiffy - the Typhoon aircraft
ty - thank you
vb - vehicle base
vh - vehicle hangar
vulching - killing someone as they take off
wtg - way to go
zero / zeke - the A6M5b aircraft
And from me:
Feet wet - you transitioned from over land to water.
Feet dry - you transitioned from water to land.
fuzeman