Anti-latinism in Morse Code

Using our Alphabet to morse chart, the word anti-latinism translates to

.- -. - .. -....- .-.. .- - .. -. .. ... --

Listen to how "anti-latinism" sounds in morse code


You can see the letter breakdown of the word in the table below.

a .-
n -.
t -
i ..
- -....-
l .-..
a .-
t -
i ..
n -.
i ..
s ...
m --

What is Morse code?

Morse code used dots and dashes to send messages. Back in the 19th century, Morse code emerged for long-distance communication. The original system used basic patterns to represent a limited set of characters. Eventually, Morse code expanded to cover the full alphabet. In 1851, a standardised form called International Morse Code was introduced.


How to translate Morse code?

Easily encode or decode Morse messages with the tool provided. We're showing how the phrase anti-latinism is written as .- -. - .. -....- .-.. .- - .. -. .. ... -- using dots and dashes. Click the audio button to listen to the Morse version. To decode manually, you'll need to understand the basic symbols: dits and dahs. Each Morse character mirrors a letter in the English alphabet.


Translate any word to Morse code

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