The Signal Corps is a military branch, usually subordinate to a country's army, responsible for the military communications (signals).
Many countries have a Signal Corps, whose main function is usually communication (in modern times, usually radio, telephone or now digital communications on the battlefield).
- Arma delle Trasmissioni, corps of Italian Army founded in 1953, see List of active units of the Italian Army
- Rejimen Semboyan Diraja, Malaysian Royal Signals Regiment
- Royal Australian Corps of Signals
- Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, formed in 1903 as the Canadian Signalling Corps
- Royal New Zealand Corps of Signals
- Royal Corps of Signals, founded in the United Kingdom (under the name Telegraph Battalion Royal Engineers) in 1884
- Indian Army Corps of Signals (India), raised in 1911.
- Pakistan Army Corps of Signals, raised in 1947.
- Signal Corps (United States Army), founded in 1860 by Major Albert J. Myer
- Singapore Armed Forces Signals Formation
- Sri Lanka Signals Corps
- Telegrafregimentet, Royal Danish Signal Regiment
Famous quotes containing the words signal and/or corps:
“Perhaps having built a barricade when you’re sixteen provides you with a sort of safety rail. If you’ve once taken part in building one, even inadvertently, doesn’t its usually latent image reappear like a warning signal whenever you’re tempted to join the police, or support any manifestation of Law and Order?”
—Jean Genet (1910–1986)
“The Washington press corps thinks that Julie Nixon Eisenhower is the only member of the Nixon Administration who has any credibility—and, as one journalist put it, this is not to say that anyone believes what she is saying but simply that people believe she believes what she is saying ... it is almost as if she is the only woman in America over the age of twenty who still thinks her father is exactly what she thought he was when she was six.”
—Nora Ephron (b. 1941)