
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
The ENGLISH of MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS
CHAPTER I OUR APPROACH TO A CRITICAL MATTER
CHAPTER II MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS
CHAPTER III PROBLEMS IN THE COMPOSITION OF THE FIELD MESSAGE
CHAPTER IV MORE PROBLEMS ON THE COMPOSITION OF THE FIELD MESSAGE
CHAPTER V VERBAL FIELD MESSAGE - OBSERVATION—ATTENTION—EXPOSITION
CHAPTER VI THE FIELD ORDER, THE ESTIMATE, THE DECISION, THE EXPRESSION
CHAPTER VII PROBLEMS IN THE FIELD ORDER
CHAPTER VIII MORE PROBLEMS OF THE COMPOSITION OF THE FIELD ORDER - (3) Order for Position in Readiness
The book opens by stressing that in military operations every word can mean the difference between success and disaster. It explains how ambiguity has doomed campaigns throughout history and makes a compelling case that brevity and precision are not optional luxuries but vital lifelines. Readers are invited to consider the split between deciding on a course of action and translating that decision into clear orders, a skill the author argues many officers struggle to master.
Drawing on the author’s experience as a combat veteran and a professor at a military academy, the guide blends practical advice with concise rhetorical theory. It includes footnotes, phonetic symbols for tricky pronunciations, and short exercises designed to sharpen the habit of drafting unmistakable messages. The text also points out common pitfalls—slang, vague phrasing, and over‑elaboration—that can cloud intent.
For anyone preparing to lead troops or support a command structure, the book offers a straightforward toolkit for turning decisive thoughts into decisive language. By the end of the first section, listeners will have a clearer sense of how to shape orders that are both swift and unmistakable, laying a foundation for safer, more effective communication on the battlefield.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (317K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Menasha, WI: George Banta, 1918.
Credits
Tim Lindell, John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2023-09-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1881–1966
A career Army officer who turned firsthand experience into lively military history, he wrote with the confidence of someone who had spent decades inside the institution he described. His best-known work, The History of the United States Army, helped introduce generations of readers to the long story of the American soldier.
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