What do you call a plan that's an alternative plan in case your initial plan fails?





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19















I think there's a word or an adjective for it, but I don't remember what it was. I don't want to say plan B, because that's too informal, but I remember there was a good word for it. I just don't remember it anymore.



For example:




The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general
had to rely on his ___ plan.











share|improve this question


















  • 24





    As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

    – J.R.
    Apr 13 at 20:02













  • FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

    – Doktor J
    2 days ago




















19















I think there's a word or an adjective for it, but I don't remember what it was. I don't want to say plan B, because that's too informal, but I remember there was a good word for it. I just don't remember it anymore.



For example:




The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general
had to rely on his ___ plan.











share|improve this question


















  • 24





    As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

    – J.R.
    Apr 13 at 20:02













  • FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

    – Doktor J
    2 days ago
















19












19








19


3






I think there's a word or an adjective for it, but I don't remember what it was. I don't want to say plan B, because that's too informal, but I remember there was a good word for it. I just don't remember it anymore.



For example:




The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general
had to rely on his ___ plan.











share|improve this question














I think there's a word or an adjective for it, but I don't remember what it was. I don't want to say plan B, because that's too informal, but I remember there was a good word for it. I just don't remember it anymore.



For example:




The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general
had to rely on his ___ plan.








word-request






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share|improve this question











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asked Apr 13 at 16:23









frbsfokfrbsfok

1,073525




1,073525








  • 24





    As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

    – J.R.
    Apr 13 at 20:02













  • FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

    – Doktor J
    2 days ago
















  • 24





    As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

    – J.R.
    Apr 13 at 20:02













  • FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

    – Doktor J
    2 days ago










24




24





As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

– J.R.
Apr 13 at 20:02







As a footnote, I found Plan B listed in four dictionaries, and none of them listed it as informal, colloquial, or slang. (There’s nothing wrong with asking for synonyms, but it may not be as informal as you seem to think it is.)

– J.R.
Apr 13 at 20:02















FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

– Doktor J
2 days ago







FWIW, I think "backup plan" is more commonplace (at least here in the US) than "fallback plan". Both are acceptable and likely as easily understood by native English speakers pretty much anywhere, but I figured it was worth noting that backup plan seems to be more common. This Google Ngram shows first usage of "backup" in 1958 vs "fallback" in 1964, with backup being ~10x more popular.

– Doktor J
2 days ago












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















40














The Oxford Dictionary has




fallback

NOUN



1 An alternative plan that may be used in an emergency.



Make sure you have a fallback plan in case something goes terribly wrong




So the sentence can be




The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general had to rely on his fallback plan.




In the context, this is particularly apt.






share|improve this answer



















  • 24





    "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

    – Riker
    Apr 14 at 1:39






  • 2





    Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

    – Mike Brockington
    Apr 15 at 14:08






  • 2





    @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

    – Mr Lister
    Apr 15 at 15:44






  • 1





    Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

    – Weather Vane
    Apr 15 at 17:07






  • 5





    As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

    – JeffC
    Apr 15 at 22:21



















113














That's often called a backup plan:




He was used as a backup plan when the remaining members of the gang failed to accomplish their mission.




This usage is also mentioned in Merriam-Webster's definition for backup:




1 a: one that serves as a substitute or support

// I brought an extra pencil for backup.

// a backup plan







share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 14 at 9:04






  • 1





    That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

    – Glorfindel
    Apr 14 at 13:02






  • 1





    I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

    – Nelson
    Apr 15 at 4:25






  • 1





    @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

    – WendyG
    Apr 15 at 11:11






  • 1





    Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

    – snailboat
    Apr 16 at 5:10





















73














That could also be called a contingency or a contingency plan. The Oxford Living Dictionaries gives sense 1.1 under noun as :




A provision for a possible event or circumstance.




"stores were kept as a contingency against a blockade"





The process of developing one or several alternate plans is often called contingency planning.



Dictionary.com gives as an example:




Turkey has cooperated at times with Israel and the West on contingency planning for Syria during its civil war. (Israel Bombs Gaza While Hamas’ Kidnapping Mastermind Sits in Turkey|Eli Lake|July 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST)







share|improve this answer

































    28














    For military purposes, it's Contingency Plan. This is the accepted term as taught in all leadership and mission planning courses, from Basic training to NCO Academy. The terms 'Backup Plan' and 'Fallback Plan' are NEVER used, since they have a negative connotation much in the same vein as 'Retreat'.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.
















    • 2





      Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

      – Xen2050
      Apr 15 at 1:05











    • As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

      – mckenzm
      Apr 15 at 5:29






    • 5





      Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

      – J...
      Apr 15 at 14:19












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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    40














    The Oxford Dictionary has




    fallback

    NOUN



    1 An alternative plan that may be used in an emergency.



    Make sure you have a fallback plan in case something goes terribly wrong




    So the sentence can be




    The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general had to rely on his fallback plan.




    In the context, this is particularly apt.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 24





      "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

      – Riker
      Apr 14 at 1:39






    • 2





      Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

      – Mike Brockington
      Apr 15 at 14:08






    • 2





      @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

      – Mr Lister
      Apr 15 at 15:44






    • 1





      Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

      – Weather Vane
      Apr 15 at 17:07






    • 5





      As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

      – JeffC
      Apr 15 at 22:21
















    40














    The Oxford Dictionary has




    fallback

    NOUN



    1 An alternative plan that may be used in an emergency.



    Make sure you have a fallback plan in case something goes terribly wrong




    So the sentence can be




    The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general had to rely on his fallback plan.




    In the context, this is particularly apt.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 24





      "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

      – Riker
      Apr 14 at 1:39






    • 2





      Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

      – Mike Brockington
      Apr 15 at 14:08






    • 2





      @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

      – Mr Lister
      Apr 15 at 15:44






    • 1





      Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

      – Weather Vane
      Apr 15 at 17:07






    • 5





      As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

      – JeffC
      Apr 15 at 22:21














    40












    40








    40







    The Oxford Dictionary has




    fallback

    NOUN



    1 An alternative plan that may be used in an emergency.



    Make sure you have a fallback plan in case something goes terribly wrong




    So the sentence can be




    The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general had to rely on his fallback plan.




    In the context, this is particularly apt.






    share|improve this answer













    The Oxford Dictionary has




    fallback

    NOUN



    1 An alternative plan that may be used in an emergency.



    Make sure you have a fallback plan in case something goes terribly wrong




    So the sentence can be




    The army was flanked by the enemies unexpectedly so that the general had to rely on his fallback plan.




    In the context, this is particularly apt.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 13 at 19:10









    Weather VaneWeather Vane

    5,3681618




    5,3681618








    • 24





      "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

      – Riker
      Apr 14 at 1:39






    • 2





      Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

      – Mike Brockington
      Apr 15 at 14:08






    • 2





      @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

      – Mr Lister
      Apr 15 at 15:44






    • 1





      Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

      – Weather Vane
      Apr 15 at 17:07






    • 5





      As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

      – JeffC
      Apr 15 at 22:21














    • 24





      "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

      – Riker
      Apr 14 at 1:39






    • 2





      Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

      – Mike Brockington
      Apr 15 at 14:08






    • 2





      @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

      – Mr Lister
      Apr 15 at 15:44






    • 1





      Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

      – Weather Vane
      Apr 15 at 17:07






    • 5





      As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

      – JeffC
      Apr 15 at 22:21








    24




    24





    "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

    – Riker
    Apr 14 at 1:39





    "Backup" is one I hear used a lot as well, i.e. "Luckily, he had a backup plan."

    – Riker
    Apr 14 at 1:39




    2




    2





    Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

    – Mike Brockington
    Apr 15 at 14:08





    Sorry, but 'fallback' is a bad choice for this example, since it implies that it involves a retreat of some sort, which is inappropriate at best.

    – Mike Brockington
    Apr 15 at 14:08




    2




    2





    @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

    – Mr Lister
    Apr 15 at 15:44





    @MikeBrockington You mean, because it sounds like "fall back", its meaning is the same? I disagree.

    – Mr Lister
    Apr 15 at 15:44




    1




    1





    Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

    – Weather Vane
    Apr 15 at 17:07





    Sometimes "backup" isn't an emergency plan at all but part of the main plan, that is, support.

    – Weather Vane
    Apr 15 at 17:07




    5




    5





    As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

    – JeffC
    Apr 15 at 22:21





    As a native speaker in the US, this may be a valid word to use but it's rarely used. A backup plan is MUCH more common.

    – JeffC
    Apr 15 at 22:21













    113














    That's often called a backup plan:




    He was used as a backup plan when the remaining members of the gang failed to accomplish their mission.




    This usage is also mentioned in Merriam-Webster's definition for backup:




    1 a: one that serves as a substitute or support

    // I brought an extra pencil for backup.

    // a backup plan







    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

      – Kelly Thomas
      Apr 14 at 9:04






    • 1





      That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

      – Glorfindel
      Apr 14 at 13:02






    • 1





      I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

      – Nelson
      Apr 15 at 4:25






    • 1





      @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

      – WendyG
      Apr 15 at 11:11






    • 1





      Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

      – snailboat
      Apr 16 at 5:10


















    113














    That's often called a backup plan:




    He was used as a backup plan when the remaining members of the gang failed to accomplish their mission.




    This usage is also mentioned in Merriam-Webster's definition for backup:




    1 a: one that serves as a substitute or support

    // I brought an extra pencil for backup.

    // a backup plan







    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

      – Kelly Thomas
      Apr 14 at 9:04






    • 1





      That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

      – Glorfindel
      Apr 14 at 13:02






    • 1





      I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

      – Nelson
      Apr 15 at 4:25






    • 1





      @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

      – WendyG
      Apr 15 at 11:11






    • 1





      Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

      – snailboat
      Apr 16 at 5:10
















    113












    113








    113







    That's often called a backup plan:




    He was used as a backup plan when the remaining members of the gang failed to accomplish their mission.




    This usage is also mentioned in Merriam-Webster's definition for backup:




    1 a: one that serves as a substitute or support

    // I brought an extra pencil for backup.

    // a backup plan







    share|improve this answer















    That's often called a backup plan:




    He was used as a backup plan when the remaining members of the gang failed to accomplish their mission.




    This usage is also mentioned in Merriam-Webster's definition for backup:




    1 a: one that serves as a substitute or support

    // I brought an extra pencil for backup.

    // a backup plan








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Apr 15 at 7:01

























    answered Apr 13 at 16:27









    GlorfindelGlorfindel

    6,364113041




    6,364113041








    • 1





      I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

      – Kelly Thomas
      Apr 14 at 9:04






    • 1





      That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

      – Glorfindel
      Apr 14 at 13:02






    • 1





      I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

      – Nelson
      Apr 15 at 4:25






    • 1





      @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

      – WendyG
      Apr 15 at 11:11






    • 1





      Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

      – snailboat
      Apr 16 at 5:10
















    • 1





      I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

      – Kelly Thomas
      Apr 14 at 9:04






    • 1





      That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

      – Glorfindel
      Apr 14 at 13:02






    • 1





      I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

      – Nelson
      Apr 15 at 4:25






    • 1





      @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

      – WendyG
      Apr 15 at 11:11






    • 1





      Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

      – snailboat
      Apr 16 at 5:10










    1




    1





    I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 14 at 9:04





    I don't think backup plan is the most used term.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 14 at 9:04




    1




    1





    That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

    – Glorfindel
    Apr 14 at 13:02





    That surprises me, but check this graph. It only runs to 2008, and the growth of 'backup plan' might have been halted, but I'm really curious what the frequency nowadays is.

    – Glorfindel
    Apr 14 at 13:02




    1




    1





    I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

    – Nelson
    Apr 15 at 4:25





    I think the term "backup" gained a lot more technical meaning and it simply sounds like something a server administrator does.

    – Nelson
    Apr 15 at 4:25




    1




    1





    @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

    – WendyG
    Apr 15 at 11:11





    @DoctorPenguin yeah I have never heard anyone say "fallback" plan but loads having a backup plan.

    – WendyG
    Apr 15 at 11:11




    1




    1





    Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

    – snailboat
    Apr 16 at 5:10







    Yes, backup plan is the most common in American English: english-corpora.org/coca/?c=coca&q=74949944

    – snailboat
    Apr 16 at 5:10













    73














    That could also be called a contingency or a contingency plan. The Oxford Living Dictionaries gives sense 1.1 under noun as :




    A provision for a possible event or circumstance.




    "stores were kept as a contingency against a blockade"





    The process of developing one or several alternate plans is often called contingency planning.



    Dictionary.com gives as an example:




    Turkey has cooperated at times with Israel and the West on contingency planning for Syria during its civil war. (Israel Bombs Gaza While Hamas’ Kidnapping Mastermind Sits in Turkey|Eli Lake|July 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST)







    share|improve this answer






























      73














      That could also be called a contingency or a contingency plan. The Oxford Living Dictionaries gives sense 1.1 under noun as :




      A provision for a possible event or circumstance.




      "stores were kept as a contingency against a blockade"





      The process of developing one or several alternate plans is often called contingency planning.



      Dictionary.com gives as an example:




      Turkey has cooperated at times with Israel and the West on contingency planning for Syria during its civil war. (Israel Bombs Gaza While Hamas’ Kidnapping Mastermind Sits in Turkey|Eli Lake|July 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST)







      share|improve this answer




























        73












        73








        73







        That could also be called a contingency or a contingency plan. The Oxford Living Dictionaries gives sense 1.1 under noun as :




        A provision for a possible event or circumstance.




        "stores were kept as a contingency against a blockade"





        The process of developing one or several alternate plans is often called contingency planning.



        Dictionary.com gives as an example:




        Turkey has cooperated at times with Israel and the West on contingency planning for Syria during its civil war. (Israel Bombs Gaza While Hamas’ Kidnapping Mastermind Sits in Turkey|Eli Lake|July 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST)







        share|improve this answer















        That could also be called a contingency or a contingency plan. The Oxford Living Dictionaries gives sense 1.1 under noun as :




        A provision for a possible event or circumstance.




        "stores were kept as a contingency against a blockade"





        The process of developing one or several alternate plans is often called contingency planning.



        Dictionary.com gives as an example:




        Turkey has cooperated at times with Israel and the West on contingency planning for Syria during its civil war. (Israel Bombs Gaza While Hamas’ Kidnapping Mastermind Sits in Turkey|Eli Lake|July 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST)








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 2 days ago









        Michael Rybkin

        27.5k11112243




        27.5k11112243










        answered Apr 13 at 20:05









        David SiegelDavid Siegel

        2,718215




        2,718215























            28














            For military purposes, it's Contingency Plan. This is the accepted term as taught in all leadership and mission planning courses, from Basic training to NCO Academy. The terms 'Backup Plan' and 'Fallback Plan' are NEVER used, since they have a negative connotation much in the same vein as 'Retreat'.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.
















            • 2





              Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

              – Xen2050
              Apr 15 at 1:05











            • As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

              – mckenzm
              Apr 15 at 5:29






            • 5





              Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

              – J...
              Apr 15 at 14:19


















            28














            For military purposes, it's Contingency Plan. This is the accepted term as taught in all leadership and mission planning courses, from Basic training to NCO Academy. The terms 'Backup Plan' and 'Fallback Plan' are NEVER used, since they have a negative connotation much in the same vein as 'Retreat'.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.
















            • 2





              Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

              – Xen2050
              Apr 15 at 1:05











            • As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

              – mckenzm
              Apr 15 at 5:29






            • 5





              Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

              – J...
              Apr 15 at 14:19
















            28












            28








            28







            For military purposes, it's Contingency Plan. This is the accepted term as taught in all leadership and mission planning courses, from Basic training to NCO Academy. The terms 'Backup Plan' and 'Fallback Plan' are NEVER used, since they have a negative connotation much in the same vein as 'Retreat'.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.










            For military purposes, it's Contingency Plan. This is the accepted term as taught in all leadership and mission planning courses, from Basic training to NCO Academy. The terms 'Backup Plan' and 'Fallback Plan' are NEVER used, since they have a negative connotation much in the same vein as 'Retreat'.







            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer






            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            answered Apr 14 at 11:16









            Michael BellMichael Bell

            28112




            28112




            New contributor




            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





            New contributor





            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






            Michael Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.








            • 2





              Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

              – Xen2050
              Apr 15 at 1:05











            • As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

              – mckenzm
              Apr 15 at 5:29






            • 5





              Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

              – J...
              Apr 15 at 14:19
















            • 2





              Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

              – Xen2050
              Apr 15 at 1:05











            • As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

              – mckenzm
              Apr 15 at 5:29






            • 5





              Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

              – J...
              Apr 15 at 14:19










            2




            2





            Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

            – Xen2050
            Apr 15 at 1:05





            Great answer, especially since the Q has a military example.

            – Xen2050
            Apr 15 at 1:05













            As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

            – mckenzm
            Apr 15 at 5:29





            As do "Abort" and "Surrender". But consider also "Auftragstaktik" borrowed from the German. Only used in very educated circles.

            – mckenzm
            Apr 15 at 5:29




            5




            5





            Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

            – J...
            Apr 15 at 14:19







            Not just a negative connotation but also could lead to misunderstandings or ambiguity. "Fallback!" is a pretty clear order to do a pretty clear thing - you don't want a commander telling people to go to the "fallback" plan and have people start running away because they misheard the context. Same reason air traffic control never use the word "takeoff" unless they are telling someone they are clear for takeoff - you don't want someone hearing the word and thinking they've been told to do something they've not.

            – J...
            Apr 15 at 14:19







            protected by Community Apr 15 at 0:00



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