C in Morse Code: Alternating Dash Dot

The letter C in Morse code uses -.-. (dash dot dash dot). This page explains the sound, timing, common confusions, and practical ways to use C in real Morse messages.

Advertisement
1 / 2000
Output
Advertisement

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to contact us.
support@morsecodegenerator.org

C

C in Morse Code

-.-.

Description

The letter C in Morse code uses -.-. (dash dot dash dot). This page explains the sound, timing, common confusions, and practical ways to use C in real Morse messages.

More Information

What Is C in Morse Code?

The letter C in Morse code is -.-.. It is sent as dash dot dash dot, or dah dit dah dit. Unlike letters that group all dots or all dashes together, C has an alternating rhythm, which makes it one of the more musical letters in the Morse alphabet.

Why C Has a Distinct Sound

C is useful for ear training because it forces you to hear the order of the elements, not just count them. A beginner might remember that C has two dashes and two dots, but that is not enough. The exact sequence is what matters: dash, dot, dash, dot. If the final dot is dropped, the sound becomes K, -.-. If the last part is changed, it may drift toward Y, -.--.

C, K, and CQ

C is also interesting because it appears at the start of the well-known radio call “CQ,” used to invite any station to respond. CQ is sent as C followed by Q, so the C portion is -.-.. For a single-letter lookup page, the key point is that C should still be practiced as its own complete character with the normal character gap after it. It is not a prosign by itself.

Practical Uses for C

The letter C is common in initials, names, brand abbreviations, school exercises, and puzzle clues. Its alternating shape looks good in graphic design because it creates a clear long-short-long-short pattern. That makes -.-. useful for bracelets, tattoos, stickers, keychains, or hidden codes inside a poster or game interface.

How to Practice C

Practice C by pairing it with K and Y. Send C as dah dit dah dit, K as dah dit dah, and Y as dah dit dah dah. This comparison gives the ear a reason to notice the ending. Once you can hear whether the character stops after K or continues into C, decoding names and callsigns becomes much easier.

Practical Uses

  • Encoding the initial C in names or brands
  • Practicing alternating Morse rhythms
  • Comparing C with K and Y
  • Building CQ-related radio learning pages
  • Designing long-short-long-short visual patterns

Frequently Asked Questions

What is C in Morse code?

C uses -.-. (dash dot dash dot) in International Morse code.

How is C different from K in Morse code?

K uses -.-. C uses -.-., adding one final dot after K's rhythm.

Why is C important in radio Morse?

C appears in CQ, a common radio call used when a station is calling for any station to respond.