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cavelltodd
July 25th 11, 02:09 AM
Hey everybody! This is my first post. Got a question...

Say you're an American pilot flying to Germany. What language is used when communicating with the tower? Does the American pilot have to be able to speak the language of the country they are flying to? Maybe this is a stupid question but I've always wondered how that works.

george
July 25th 11, 02:49 AM
On Jul 25, 1:09*pm, cavelltodd >
wrote:
> Hey everybody! This is my first post. Got a question...
>
> Say you're an American pilot flying to Germany. What language is used
> when communicating with the tower? Does the American pilot have to be
> able to speak the language of the country they are flying to? Maybe this
> is a stupid question but I've always wondered how that works.
>

English is the international language.
It's a requirement for an Airline Transport Pilot License that the
applicant speaks and understands English

John Smith
July 27th 11, 08:49 PM
cavelltodd wrote:
> Say you're an American pilot flying to Germany. What language is used
> when communicating with the tower? Does the American pilot have to be

ATC and the tower of bigger aerodromes speak English. Note that I said
English and not some Texas backcountry mumble. And you're supposed to
know and use the ICAO phraseology.

At smaller uncontrolled airfields they may or may not understand English.

addage5228FC8
August 11th 11, 09:45 AM
Hey everybody! This is my first post. Got a question...

Say you're an American pilot flying to Germany. What language is used when communicating with the tower? Does the American pilot have to be able to speak the language of the country they are flying to? Maybe this is a stupid question but I've always wondered how that works.

English must do! For as we know, it is the international language.

Martin Hotze[_3_]
August 11th 11, 05:58 PM
Am 11.08.2011 10:45, schrieb addage5228FC8:
> English must do! For as we know, it is the international language.

not really. :-)
There are more ICAO languages than english.
AFAIK there are french and russian as further official ICAO languages.

#m
--
"What would I do with 72 virgins? That's not a reward,
that's a punishment. Give me two seasoned whores any day."
(Billy Connolly)

VOR-DME[_4_]
August 27th 11, 05:19 PM
In article >, says...

>
>IFR is always English. VFR is either English or German. ATC, Flight
>Information Service, and towers of controlled airports are able to
>communicate in both languages. You'll hear both languages on the
>frequency, depending on what each pilot prefers. The controllers switch
>languages all the time.
>
>At smaller airfields, German is the dominant language, but there is no
>reason you can't communicate in English there. There is no guarantee
>that the ground person manning the radio or other pilots will understand
>you, even though chances are fairly good they will. At small
>uncontrolled airfields, radio contact (in any language) is not mandatory
>(just good practice), so that's not a show stopper.
>
>AFAICT the situation in other European countries is similar.
>


Not entirely.
In France, IFR is English or French. VFR as well, at controlled
airfields. At most uncontrolled airfields, as well as
aircraft-to-aircraft communication outside of control operating hours,
French is required.

jacksonstephenson
September 15th 11, 08:24 PM
Well,after going through the posts I would like to say that flying in a plane is a nice experience & I feel is through out the life the person should experience the pride of a sitting in a plane.It is unexplainable.I like to visit in a plane.

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