NATO Phonetic Alphabet

V

Victor

Pronounced VIK-ter

What does "Victor" mean?

In the NATO phonetic alphabet, the letter V is represented by the codeword Victor, pronounced VIK-ter. When spelling over radio, phone, or in person in noisy environments, you say "Victor" to unambiguously indicate the letter V.

History & etymology

Latin for 'conqueror'; the sharp V-K consonant pair is acoustically unique.

How to use it

Say "Victor" whenever you need to specify the letter V aloud. Common situations: dictating an email address or license plate over the phone, reading a serial number to technical support, making a radio call in aviation or maritime contexts, or simply avoiding the common confusion between similar-sounding letters (B/D/P/T, M/N, F/S).

Example

If your name starts with V, you might say "Victor as in Victor" when spelling it out — or use the NATO alphabet for your whole name using our translator.

Neighboring letters

Explore the codewords for the letters before and after V below. For the full 26-letter chart with pronunciation and history, visit the NATO alphabet reference page. Prefer to memorize it? Try our flashcards.