
<p>Did you know that pilots and flight attendants use special code words in non-standard situations — words passengers won&#8217;t understand — to avoid causing panic on board? On the Q&;A platform Quora, users discussed whether you should worry if you hear such words from airline staff. Here&#8217;s how flight attendant Kevin Barrett, with 20 years in aviation, explains the matter.</p>
<h3>Easy Victor</h3>
<p>The phrase <strong>Easy Victor</strong>, spoken on its own or as part of a sentence, signals the need for an immediate evacuation. It is never announced over the intercom — it is part of the secret language used between crew members. In practice, Kevin has only ever heard these words during drills, and notes that emergency aircraft evacuations are extremely rare. Crucially, who says the code matters: as a rule, it is acted upon only when it comes from the captain or first officer. It&#8217;s also worth noting that during an emergency evacuation, carry-on luggage is strictly prohibited: bags block the aisle and can tear the inflatable slide. Aviation safety standards require the crew to evacuate everyone as quickly as possible — the benchmark during training is 90 seconds.</p>
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<h3>7500</h3>
<p>This code, known among pilots and air traffic controllers as <strong>&#8220;squawk seven-five-zero-zero,&#8221;</strong> is used in communications between pilots and controllers and serves as a signal that the aircraft has been hijacked or that a hijacking threat has arisen.</p>
<h3>Mayday</h3>
<p>This is declared when a life-threatening emergency occurs on board, such as engine failure or a fire. It derives from the French <em>m&#8217;aider</em>, meaning &#8220;help me,&#8221; and is repeated three times at the start of the distress call.</p>
<h3>Pan-Pan</h3>
<p>This code also has French roots, coming from the word <em>panne</em> (&#8220;breakdown,&#8221; &#8220;failure,&#8221; &#8220;malfunction&#8221;). It is spoken three times to indicate a less serious emergency situation.</p>

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