Every letter, number, and punctuation symbol in Morse code. Click the play button on any card to hear it. Use the filter tabs to jump between categories.
Morse code represents each character as a unique sequence of dots (·) and dashes (–). A dot is a short signal, and a dash is three times longer than a dot. Spaces between symbols within a character are one unit, between characters are three units, and between words are seven units.
Start with the most common letters — E (·) and T (–) are the simplest. Then move to I (··), A (·–), and N (–·). Practice by listening, not just reading — use the play buttons above to train your ear.
Both Morse code and Braille are encoding systems for letters, but Morse uses time-based signals (sound, light, touch) while Braille uses spatial dot patterns. Morse code was designed for transmission over wire and radio, while Braille was designed for reading by touch.