カキクケコ Ka Ki Ku Ke KoStart sendingBasic Stroke 2アイウエオ - A I U E O
Japanese alphabet in katakana charactersReplyThese two types goes by shape, and are easy to understand!Once they are ready to decode.Flag semaphore uses a combination of basic strokes to roughly form katakana characters. Within 800 meters, they were able to transmit up to 55 characters per minute.
The Navy and the Army's flags were shaped differently. The Navy's flag had handles. Although I couldn't find sources with clear confirmation on the Army flags, I have received information that the Army flags were carried the way Maruyu is holding to the right. Until 1921, there were Army semaphore flags elongated horzontally used for aviation purposes.Send once they acknowledged the signal.Basic Stroke 0Flag Semaphore
Answer keyAcknowledged(Reverse)Reference to "Naval Warship Mechanisms Encyclopedia: Japanese Destroyers", Wikipedia article on semaphore flags, etc...Basic Stroke 1Basic Stroke 14RestCancelReverseOne rotationYou probably got the right answer if you found the dakuten by listening to my four letter advice, and saw where I began each line.AcknowledgeBasic stroke 13Waves until a response is given.Su and Ne are exceptions. They're based on 寸 and 子.Japanese semaphore strokes used for signal transmissions.※The Naval Warship Mechanism Encyclopedia did not list the the reverse on the second stroke for エ(E).So the answer is "Nanodesu!"