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The Airline Codes They Never Tell You About

two airplanes flying in the sky

Over the years, we’ve taught our fellow travelers special codes they’re not necessarily supposed to know about:

There’s plenty of other types of industry lingo though. Sometimes they’re established so businesses can quickly and effectively communicate with their employees without their guests, customers, passengers, etc. knowing what they’re talking about.

Case in point, when I worked at The Disney Store a bajillion years ago (well, not a bajillion. Just  1996-1998. R.I.P., store #535 in the Staten Island Mall!), we had our own words and signs to communicate with each other. For example, at Disney, everyone in your store was a “guest.” But if it looked as if someone was shoplifting, you were supposed to refer to them as a “customer,” so your managers and fellow workers would know your suspicions, keep an eye on them, etc. Signing the letter “T” in American Sign Language (ASL) to whoever was the manager of the moment ((I heard other stores used the ASL letter “B,” to mean “bathroom”) was your way of letting them know you had to use the toilet and needed someone to take your spot for a few minutes, without screaming “I GOTTA PEE!” across the store (that’d be very “unDisney”).

The letter T in ASL

But sometimes the industry lingo, acronyms and abbreviations aren’t so much something secret than just a means to make communication faster. The airline industry, in particular, has lots and lots of these. Travel geeks probably know a lot of them, like PAX for passengers. But they may not know them all. Like these (Note: Lingo can change, especially from country to country. I’ve added in the differences that I know):

There are literally HUNDREDS of other acronyms and phrases that aviation crew use – especially when you consider variations from country to country. But that’s a good start. 😉

(if you’re in aviation and can think of other legit ones that are particularly important, please reply and let us know!)

Feature Image: Pexels

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