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For an example, let's consider the time specification "1539Z".

How do the people in the military spell that? "Fifteen thirty-nine Zulu"? "Fifteen thirty-nine zee"? "One fife tree niner zulu"? Are there differences between US, Canadian, British, Australian (and other English-speaking NATO members) spelling of this time specification - and if so, what are they?

The scenario here is how to put the time in writing as direct speech/quotation of someone. This is important in the following cases:

  • It's a direct quotation, and I want to write down what would be spoken exactly as it would be spoken (but don't have access to audio logs).
  • It's direct speech in a work of fiction, where how someone spells the time specification gives a hint to their background.

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NATO military pronounces individual letters as words to ensure clarity. They use the NATO Phonetic alphabet. Time is pronounced as two digit/two digit, unless it's precisely on the hour. 0430 is oh-four thirty, or zero-four thirty. 21:35 is twenty-one thirty-five. 19:00 is nineteen hundred.

Thus 1539Z "Fifteen thirty-nine Zulu"

As an aside, Zulu represents Greenwich Mean Time.

Marcus_33
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    "Zulu time" actually represents UTC (which has a difference from GMT of up to 0.9 seconds). Just to clear this up, how would one say "0300", "oh-three hundred" or "three hundred"? – Martin Sojka Sep 14 '12 at 21:04
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    @Martin: oh-three hundred. – J.R. Sep 15 '12 at 04:24