Letters

Letters in Morse Code

Use this A-Z Morse code letters page as a single reference hub for alphabet lookup, quick checking, and lightweight memorization.

Last updated: April 12, 2026Editor: Morse Code Translator TeamReference: International Morse code standard chart

Quick chart

Scan the patterns first

These hub pages keep the launch structure compact. Users can scan useful Morse references in one place without the site expanding into dozens of near-duplicate URLs.

A in Morse Code

.-

B in Morse Code

-...

C in Morse Code

-.-.

D in Morse Code

-..

E in Morse Code

.

F in Morse Code

..-.

G in Morse Code

--.

H in Morse Code

....

I in Morse Code

..

J in Morse Code

.---

K in Morse Code

-.-

L in Morse Code

.-..

M in Morse Code

--

N in Morse Code

-.

O in Morse Code

---

P in Morse Code

.--.

Q in Morse Code

--.-

R in Morse Code

.-.

S in Morse Code

...

T in Morse Code

-

U in Morse Code

..-

V in Morse Code

...-

W in Morse Code

.--

X in Morse Code

-..-

Y in Morse Code

-.--

Z in Morse Code

--..

Why one page

The alphabet works better as one strong reference page

For a new site, a single letters hub is usually stronger than breaking every letter into its own thin page. Users can scan the whole alphabet quickly and compare nearby patterns without extra clicks.

This keeps the information architecture cleaner. The homepage handles translation, while the letters page handles lookup and memorization in one place.

How to use it

Scan, compare, then test words in the translator

Start with the easiest letters first, especially E, T, A, N, S, and O. These patterns are short, frequent, and useful for building rhythm recognition.

After checking a few letters here, go back to the homepage translator and type short words so the alphabet becomes practical instead of staying as isolated symbols.