Seaspeak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seaspeak is a simplified language designed to facilitate communication between ships whose captains' native tongues differ. There are similar languages for aircraft and trains. While generally based on the English language, seaspeak has a very small vocabulary, and will incorporate foreign words where English does not have a suitable word.
Seaspeak originated at the International Maritime Lecturers Association (IMLA) Workshop on Maritime English in 1985 in La Spezia (WOME 3), in a project led by Captain Fred Weeks, and was updated in the following years. After the M/S Scandinavian Star disaster in 1990, in which communication errors played a part, an effort was made by the International Maritime Organization to update Seaspeak and the Standard Maritime Communication Vocabulary (SMCV). This resulted in the development of the Standard Marine Communication Phrases (SMCP), which were adopted by the IMO as resolution A.198(22) in November 2001 at their 22nd Assembly.
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[edit] Say again
A good example of the benefit of seaspeak is the use of a single short and carefully crafted phrase to replace a multitude of phrases. Thus the phrase "say again" could replace any of the following:
- Could not hear what you said, please repeat!
- I did not understand, say that again.
- Too much noise, repeat what you said!
- I am having difficulty hearing what you are saying! Please repeat what you were trying to say.
- There is too much noise on the line - I cannot understand you.
- What did you say?
A simplified vocabulary also helps overcome static, since the phrase "say again" is always two words and three syllables, no matter matter how much it is blurred by that static.
[edit] References
- Strevens, Peter (1984). Seaspeak Reference Manual. Pergamon Press. ISBN 0080310567.
- Weeks, Fred, Alan Glover, Edward Johnson, Peter Strevens (1988). Seaspeak Training Manual: Essential English for International Maritime Use. Pergamon Press. ISBN 0080315550.
- IMO Standard Marine Communication Phrases (SMCP). International Maritime Organisation. ISBN 9280151371.
[edit] External links
- IMO Standard Marine Communication Phrases and teaching their use in VTS-context, talks a little about the history of Seaspeak.
- Prolingua, the company where Edward Johnson worked on SeaSpeak, AirSpeak, etc.