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Glossary of Military Terms & Slang from the Vietnam War K-P
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K
- k
- kilometer
- KBA
- killed by artillery
- K-bar
- combat knife
- KCS
- Kit Carson scout
- KIA
- killed in action
- killing zone
- the area within an ambush where everyone is either killed or wounded
- kill zone
- the radius of a circle around an explosive device within which it is predicted that 95 percent of all occupants will be killed should the device explode
- KILO
- military phonetic for the letter 'K'
- Kit Carson scout
- former Viet Cong who act as guides for U.S. military units
- khong xau
- Vietnamese slang for "don't worry about it," literally, "not bad"
- klick
- kilometer
- Kool-Aid
- killed in action
- KP
- kitchen police; mess hall duty
- KPNFL
- Khmer People's National Liberation Front. The major non-Communist Cambodian political and resistance organization fighting against the Vietnamese occupation force. Formed in 1979 by former prime minister Son Sann, the KPNFL is responsible for caring for and protecting nearly two-thirds of the 250,000 Cambodian refugees on the Thailand border from attacks by both the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese. Also called the Sereika by Cambodians, the KPNLF joined the resistance coalition government (CGOK) in 1982 and shared Cambodia's seat at the United Nations.
L
- L
- a type of ambush set-up, shaped like the letter 'L'
- lager
- a night defensive perimeter
- Lao Dong
- the Vietnamese Workers Party
- LAAW
- a shoulder-fired, 66-millimeter rocket, similar in effect to a 3.5-inch rocket, except that the launcher is made of Fiberglass, and is disposable after one shot
- lay chilly
- to freeze; to stop all motion
- LBJ
- Long Binh Stockade, a military stockade on Long Binh post
- LCM
- a mechanized landing craft used in harbors and inland waterways
- leg
- slightly contemptuous term used by airborne-qualified troops when they are talking about regular infantry
- lego
- infantry unit
- lien doi
- company group. A Vietnamese military unit consisting of three militia infantry companies
- lifer
- career military man. The term is often used in a derogatory manner.
- LIMA
- military phonetic for the letter 'L'
- lima-lima
- land line. Refers to telephone communications between two points on the ground.
- litters
- stretchers to carry dead and wounded
- little people
- the enemy
- lit-up
- fired upon; shot and killed or wounded
- LLDB
- Luc Luong Dac Biet. The South Vietnamese Special Forces.
- LMG
- light machine gun. The Soviet made RPD, a bi-pod mounted, belt fed weapon similar to the American M-60 machine gun. The RPD fires the same cartridge as the AK-47 and the SKS carbine.
- loach
- a LOH
- Log Bird
- logistical (resupply) helicopter
- LP
- listening post. A two- or three-man position set up at night outside the perimeter away from the main body of troopers, which acted as an early warning system against attack. Also, an amphibious landing platform used by infantry for storming beaches from the sea.
- LRRP
- Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol. An elite team usually composed of five to seven men who go deep into the jungle to observe enemy activity without initiating contact.
- LSA
- small arms lubricant
- LST
- troop landing ship
- LT
- lieutenant
- lurps
- members of Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols
- LZ
- landing zone. Usually a small clearing secured temporarily for the landing of resupply helicopters. Some become more permanent and eventually become base camps.
M
- M-1
- World War II vintage American rifle
- M-14
- Wood stock rifle used in early portion of Vietnam conflict
- M-16
- the standard U.S. military rifle used in Vietnam from 1966 on. Successor to the M-14.
- M-60
- the standard lightweight machine gun used by U.S. forces in Vietnam
- M-79
- a U.S. military hand-held grenade launcher
- MA
- mechanical ambush. Euphemism for an American set booby trap.
- MACV
- Military Assistance Command / Vietnam. The main American military command unit that had responsibility for and authority over all U.S. military activities in Vietnam. Based at Tan Son Nhut.
- mad minute
- a weapons free-fire practice and test session
- Main Force Battalion
- the primary Viet Cong fighting force within each province of South Vietnam. These units were often large enough and well enough equipped to participate in direct attacks on large Vietnamese and American installations and units.
- mama san
- pidgin used by American servicemen for any older Vietnamese woman
- MARS
- Military Affiliate Radio Station. Used by soldiers to call home via Signal Corps and ham radio equipment.
- Mas-Cal
- mass casualty
- MASH
- mobile Army surgical unit
- MAT
- mobile advisory team. Five-man teams of American advisors who were assigned to live and work in the Vietnamese villages.
- Mat Tran
- the Vietnamese Liberation Front.
- marker round
- the first round fired by mortars or artillery. Used to adjust the following rounds onto the target.
- mechanized platoon
- a platoon operating with tanks and/or armored personnel carriers
- Med Cap
- Medical Civil Action Program in which U.S. medical personnel would go into the villages to minister to the local populace.
- medivac
- medical evacuation from the field by helicopter
- mermite
- large insulated foot containers
- MFW
- multiple frag wounds
- MG
- machine gun
- MIA
- missing in action
- mighty mite
- commercial air-blower used for injecting gas into tunnels
- MIKE
- military phonetic for the letter 'M'
- mike-mike
- shorthand for millimeter
- million-dollar wound
- a non-crippling wound serious enough to warrant return to the U.S.
- Minigun
- electronically controlled, extremely rapidly firing machine gun. Most often mounted on aircraft to be used against targets on the ground.
- Mr. Charles
- the Viet Cong; the enemy
- MI team
- military intelligence team
- Monday pills
- anti-malarial pills taken once a week
- the Monster
- a PRC-77
- Montagnard
- a Vietnamese term for several tribes of mountain people inhabiting the hills and mountains of central and northern Vietnam.
- moose
- a Vietnamese mistress
- mortar
- a muzzle-loading cannon with a short tube in relation to its caliber that throws projectiles with low muzzle velocity at high angles.
- MOS
- military occupational specialty
- most ricky-tick
- immediately, if not sooner
- MP
- military police
- MPC
- military payment currency. The scrip U.S. soldiers were paid in.
- MR IV
- Viet Cong military region surrounding and including Saigon
- mule
- small, motorized platform originally designed to carry a 106-millimeter recoilless rifle, but most often used for transporting supplies and personnel.
N
- Nam
- Vietnam
- napalm
- a jellied petroleum substance which burns fiercely, and is used as a weapon against personnel.
- nape
- napalm
- NCO
- noncommissioned officer. Usually a squad leader or platoon sergeant.
- NDP
- night defensive position
- net
- radio frequency setting, from "network."
- New Socialist Man
- Orwellian concept adopted by the Communists. The ideal collectivized citizen.
- Next
- the man who said he was the next to rotated home.
- nickel
- the number five
- NLF
- National Liberation Front
- no sweat
- easy, simple
- NPD
- night perimeter defense
- number one
- the best
- number ten
- the worst
- number ten thousand
- a description of how bad things can be
- Nung
- tribespeople of Chinese origin, from the highlands of North Vietnam. Some who moved South worked with the U.S. Special Forces.
- nuoc-mam
- fermented fish sauce used by the Vietnamese as a condiment
- NVA
- North Vietnamese Army
O
- OCS
- officer candidate school
- OD
- olive drab, a camouflage color
- opcon
- operational control
- open sheaf
- a term used in calling artillery, whereby the artillery rounds were spread along an axis rather than concentrated on a single point (as when it was desired to cover a treeline).
OR:
operating room
- OSCAR
- military phonetic for the letter 'O'
- OSS
- Office of Strategic Services
- over the fence
- crossing into Cambodia or Laos
P
- P
- slang for the Vietnamese piaster. One piaster was worth one cent or less.
- P-38
- a tiny collapsible can opener, also known as a "john wayne"
- PAPA
- military phonetic for the letter 'P'
- papa san
- pidgin used by U.S. servicemen for any older Vietnamese man
- Papa Sierra
- slang for platoon sergeant
- Pathet Lao
- the Laotian Communists who, from their inception have been under the control of the Vietnamese Communist Party.
- PBR
- river patrol boat. Navy designation for the fast, heavily armed boats used for safeguarding the major canals and rivers and their tributaries in South Vietnam.
- peanuts
- wounded in action
- perimeter
- outer limits of a military position. The area beyond the perimeter belongs to the enemy.
- PF
- Popular Forces. South Vietnamese National Guard-type local military units
- PFC
- private first class
- Phoenix
- intelligence-based campaign to eliminate the Viet Cong infrastructure
- PIO
- public information officer, or a person who works for that office
- piss-tube
- a vertical tube buried two-thirds in the ground for urinating into
- platoon
- a subdivision of a company-sized military unit, normally consisting of two or more squads or sections
- pogue
- derogatory term for military personnel employed in rear echelon support capacities, usually used by Marines
- point
- the forward man or element on a combat patrol
- poncho liner
- nylon insert to the military rain poncho, used as a blanket
- pop smoke
- to ignite a smoke grenade to signal an aircraft
- pos
- slang for position, usually meaning a friendly location
- post-traumatic stress disorder
- development of characteristic symptoms after the experiencing of a psychologically traumatic event or events outside the range of human experience usually considered to be normal. The characteristic symptoms involve reexperiencing the traumatic event, numbing of responsiveness to, or involvement with, the external world, exaggerated startle response, difficulty in concentrating, memory impairment, guilt feelings, and sleep difficulties.
- POW
- prisoner of war
- PRC-25
- Portable Radio Communications, Model 25. A back-packed FM receiver-transmitter used for short-distance communications. The range of the radio was 5-10 kilometers, depending on the weather, unless attached to a special, nonportable antenna which could extend the range to 20-30 kilometers.
- PRC-77
- a radio similar to the PRC-25, but with a cryptographic scrambling / descrambling unit attached. Very heavy. Transmission frequencies on the PRC-77 were called the secure net.
- prick 25
- PRC-25 radio
- profile
- a prohibition from certain types of military duty due to injury or disability
- Proo
- PRU
- province chief
- governor of a state-sized administrative te
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