DIN 5009 explained

The German national standard DIN 5009 “Word and information processing for office applications — Announcing and dictating of text and characters” by Deutsches Institut für Normung (DIN) provides rules for the spoken announcement of texts to be written afterwards. In addition to the classic phono dictation, it specifically supports oral communication about names and texts that have to be written down correctly (e.g. on the telephone).[1]

It also specifies German names for numerous script and special characters, which are important not only for oral communication but also for written teaching material. These are mostly listed in a supplement which was published together with the 2022 edition of the standard.[2]

The standard contains the German spelling alphabet. As the former version was criticized for the changes made by the Nazis in 1934, who purged all names which sound “Jewish”, and as these were restored only partially in the 1950 version, in 2019 the responsible DIN committee decided to create a new spelling alphabet consisting mainly of city names instead of person names,[3] which has been published in the 2022 version of the standard.

Revisions

Notes and References

  1. https://www.beuth.de/de/norm/din-5009/352073096 DIN 5009: Text-und Informationsverarbeitung für Büroanwendungen – Ansagen und Diktieren von Texten und Schriftzeichen
  2. https://www.beuth.de/de/norm/din-5009-beiblatt-1/352073081 DIN 5009 Beiblatt 1: Text-und Informationsverarbeitung für Büroanwendungen – Ansagen und (Diktieren von Texten und Schriftzeichen – Beiblatt 1: Ansage, Benennung und Tastatureingabe von Sonderbuchstaben und Sonderzeichen)
  3. Web site: Von Aachen bis Zwickau – DIN 5009 mit neuer Buchstabiertafel auf Basis von Städtenamen veröffentlicht . DIN . 13 May 2022 . 13 May 2022 . de.