This is a list of aviators by nickname.
A
- "Aggy" â Noel Agazarian, British, Battle of Britain ace
- "Assi" â Hans Hahn, German fighter pilot during World War II
B
- "Bake" â V. H. Baker, British pilot and aircraft designer
- "The Balloon Buster" â Frank Luke, American World War I fighter ace
- "Bam" â C. S. Bamberger, British RAF World War II pilot
- "Barron" â John Worrall, British World War II RAF pilot
- "Beazle" â Hugh John Beazley, Battle of Britain pilot
- "Bee" â Roland Beamont, Battle of Britain pilot
- "Ben" â George Bennions, Battle of Britain ace
- "Big Joe" â Joe McCarthy, RAF Bomber Command pilot (617 Squadron) in the Second World War
- "Bing" â K. B. B. Cross, British World War II RAF pilot
- "Bird" â Herbert Carmichael Irwin, Irish commander of British airships including R101
- "Black Swallow of Death" â Eugene Bullard, African-American World War I fighter pilot
- "The Black Devil"(Russ.), "Bubi"(Ger.) â Erich Hartmann, German fighter ace
- "Blondie" â Arnold Walker, British World War II RAF pilot
- "Bo" â Elwyn King, Australian World War I fighter ace
- "Bobbi" â Evelyn Trout, American aviator
- "Bomber" â Arthur T. Harris, British commander of RAF Bomber Command during World War II
- "Bomber George" â Harold L. George, USAAC precision bombing specialist (to distinguish him from "Fighter" George)
- "Boom" â Hugh Trenchard, British World War I Royal Flying Corps general and founder of the Royal Air Force (for his loud voice)
- "Boy"
- Peter Mould, British Second World War fighter ace
- Geoffrey Wellum, British Second World War fighter pilot
- "Bubi" (German, "young boy", "kid")
- Erich Hartmann, German fighter ace
- Alfred Schreiber, German jet ace
- "Buck" â Robert McNair, Canadian fighter ace
- "Bud" â George E. Day, American POW
- "Bully" â Emil Lang, World War 2 Luftwaffe fighter ace
- "Bunny" â Christopher Currant, British RAF fighter ace in World War II
- "Butch"
- Arthur T. Harris, British commander of RAF Bomber Command during World War II (from "butcher"; affectionately given by his men)
- Edward O'Hare, American World War II fighter ace and Medal of Honor recipient
- "Butcher" â Arthur T. Harris, British commander of RAF Bomber Command (Air Chief Marshal) during World War II (affectionately given by his men)
- "Buzz"
- Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., American aviator and astronaut
- George Beurling, Canadian RAF fighter ace (a nickname he never acknowledged)
C
- "Cats Eyes" â John Cunningham, Battle of Britain pilot
- "Chappie" â Daniel James, Jr., American Air Force general
- "Chuck" â Charles Elwood Yeager, World War II USAAF fighter ace and first pilot to break the sound barrier in level flight
- "Cobber" â Edgar J. Kain, Second World War RAF fighter ace
- "Cobra" â Ronald Stein, USAF fighter ace
- "Cocky" â Hugh Dundas, British Second World War RAF fighter ace
- "Cowboy" â Howard Peter Blatchford, Battle of Britain pilot
- "Crow" â Denis Crowley-Milling, Battle of Britain pilot
- "Cloudy" â Werner Christie, Norwegian fighter ace
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
O
- "One Armed Mac" â James MacLachlan, a British World War 2 ace who flew with a prosthetic arm
P
- "Paddy"
- Hubert Adair, Battle of Britain pilot
- Brendan Finucane, Irish World War II RAF fighter ace
- W. H. Harbison, British RAF officer
- "Pancho" â Florence L. Lowe, American pioneer aviator
- "Pappy"
- Greg Boyington, American World War II U.S. Marine Corps fighter ace
- Paul Gunn, American World War II Army Air Force bomber pilot
- "Pete"
- Frank K. Everest, Jr., American test pilot
- Marc Mitscher, American World War II carrier admiral
- Elwood R. Queseda, American fighter ace
- "Petit Rouge" () â Manfred von Richthofen, German fighter ace
- "Pick" - Percy Charles Pickard, well known in England during the Second World War, KIA during the Amiens prison raid
- "Pritzl" â Heinz Bär, German fighter ace, because of his affection for Pritzl candy bars.
- "Punch" â Clennell H. Dickins, Canadian pioneer bush pilot
R
S
- "Sailor" â Adolph Malan, South African RAF fighter ace
- "Sandy" â Brian Lane, RAF Battle of Britain pilot, Squadron Leader and fighter ace
- "Sexy Rexy" â Ola Mildred Rexroat, Women Airforce Service Pilot (WASP) aviator
- "Shorty" â Vernon Keogh, American who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain (named for diminutive height)
- "The Silver Fox" â Robert L. Stephens, record-setting American test pilot
- "Skip" â Jean Ziegler, American test pilot on Bell X-1 program
- "Slew" â John S. McCain, Sr., American naval aviator and chief of Bureau of Aeronautics
- "Snort" â Dale Snodgrass, American naval aviator, demonstration pilot, and commander of Fighter Wing, U.S. Atlantic Fleet
- "Snow Eagle" â Clennell H. Dickins, Canadian pioneer bush pilot
- "Spig" â Frank W. Wead, U.S. Navy aviator and screenwriter
- "Spuds" â Theodore Ellyson, pioneer U.S. Navy aviator
- "Stan" â Roderic Dallas, top Australian fighter ace of World War I
- "Stapme" â Gerald Stapleton, British Battle of Britain fighter ace
- "Strafer" â Geoffrey Warnes, No. 263 Squadron RAF
- "Stuffy" â Hugh Dowding, British commander of RAF Fighter Command from before the war into the Battle of Britain
- "Sawn Off Locky" â Eric Lock, Battle of Britain pilot
T
U
W
Z
See also
References