Military Time
Public Group active 3 years, 1 month agoMilitary time is a day clock that measures hours to 24 instead of 12 hours like civilian time. Military time is used to avoid confusion between a.m. The 24-clock is used by militaries, most European countries, and businesses engaged in 24-hour operations, like airlines and railroads. While some services refer to midnight as 2400, 0000 is more accepted around the world. The military divided the world into 24 time zones and utilizes the phonetic alphabet to identify each time zone. Sometimes military time is referred to as “24 Hour Time” and this system eliminates the need for “am” and “pm”. Because of the simple time concepts used it allows for less confusion and is the time reference choice of military communities, medical field and also the scientific fields! It has become the choice and more of the universal time as many parts of the world utilize this time telling method. Places like Philippines, Germany, Australia, India and many others use and understand military time. You can see a breakdown of which countries use military time or 24-hour time below. If you have any kind of inquiries relating to where and just how to use Ttlink.com/klausrous/all, you could contact us at the site. As you can see, most countries in the world utilize a 24-hour timekeeping system in their everyday lives and also for military use. Do you use “military time” even though you’re not in the military? Or do you just stick with the civilian 12-hour clock? Because military personnel can be involved in missions that cross time zones, they need a common time zone reference, so they know they’re talking about the same thing. “Zulu” or “Z” indicates that the time zone being referenced is Greenwich Mean Time (Coordinated Universal Time), the time zone that regulates the world’s clocks. Military time employs the 24-hour format and the NATO phonetic alphabet. Learn how it works and how to convert it to a time format you’re used to.
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