Morse code
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Morse code is a system for encoding letters and numbers as a sequence of "dots" and "dashes", consisting of short and long signals sent over some medium such as a telegraph wire or radio signal. It is named after telegraph pioneer Samuel Morse.
Latin alphabet
ITU | |
---|---|
Letter | Code |
A | • ━ |
B | ━ • • • |
C | ━ • ━ • |
D | ━ • • |
E | • |
F | • • ━ • |
G | ━ ━ • |
H | • • • • |
I | • • |
J | • ━ ━ ━ |
K | ━ • ━ |
L | • ━ • • |
M | ━ ━ |
N | ━ • |
O | ━ ━ ━ |
P | • ━ ━ • |
Q | ━ ━ • ━ |
R | • ━ • |
S | • • • |
T | ━ |
U | • • ━ |
V | • • • ━ |
W | • ━ ━ |
X | ━ • • ━ |
Y | ━ • ━ ━ |
Z | ━ ━ • • |
Resources
National Archives and Records Administration: INTERNATIONAL MORSE CODE, HAND SENDING, from the Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Chief Signal Officer. (09/18/1947 - 02/28/1964). ARC Identifier 36813 / Local Identifier 111-TF-3697. PRINCIPLES AND BASIC TECHNIQUE FOR GOOD, RHYTHMIC SENDING 0F MORSE CODE BY OPERATING THE HAND KEY.