The letter K in Morse code is:
-.-
That means dah dit dah in spoken Morse rhythm. If you only need the quick answer, write K as -.-. If you want to translate a full word, name, callsign, or message, use our morse code translator to convert it instantly and check the spacing.
| Character | Morse Code | Spoken Pattern | Detail Page |
|---|---|---|---|
| K | -.- |
dah-dit-dah | K in Morse Code |
| k | -.- |
dah-dit-dah | same as uppercase K |
Uppercase and lowercase do not change Morse code. The letter k in morse code and uppercase K use the same dot-dash pattern.
To write morse code for K, type the symbols exactly like this:
K = -.-
Keep the dots and dashes of one letter together. Use one space only when you move to the next letter.
| Input | Meaning |
|---|---|
-.- |
K |
- . - |
usually incorrect, because the parts are separated |
| no spaces between letters | hard to decode in longer words |
The spoken pattern for K is:
dah-dit-dah
In Morse timing, a dot is short and a dash is longer. A dash is usually about three times the length of a dot. You do not need perfect timing when learning, but the short and long parts should be easy to tell apart.
Here are a few simple words that include or practice the letter K.
| Word | Morse Code |
|---|---|
| OK | --- -.- |
| KEY | -.- . -.-- |
| TASK | - .- ... -.- |
Try reading the Morse from left to right. Find -.- first, then decode the letters around it.
Some Morse code letters look similar when you are new. Compare K with these nearby patterns.
| Letter | Morse Code | Difference |
|---|---|---|
| K | -.- |
target letter |
| C | -.-. |
K plus final dot |
| Y | -.-- |
K with dash ending |
| N | -. |
K without final dash |
If you make a mistake, check the order of dots and dashes first. Many beginner errors come from reversing a pattern or adding one extra signal.
You can send K in Morse code with any signal that can show short and long timing.
| Method | How to Send K |
|---|---|
| Written Morse | -.- |
| Sound | play the dah-dit-dah rhythm |
| Flashlight | flash the same short/long pattern |
| Tapping | tap the same short/long pattern |
| Vibration | buzz the same short/long pattern |
For best results, keep the parts of the letter close together, then pause before the next letter.
| Mistake | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
Adding spaces inside -.- |
A decoder may treat the parts as separate letters |
| Reversing the pattern | It may become a different letter |
| Forgetting spaces between letters | A full word becomes hard to decode |
| Learning only by sight | Listening practice is harder later |
After learning K in Morse code, go back to the Morse Code Alphabet to compare it with every other letter, or open the Morse Code Translator to convert a complete word or sentence.
Useful links:
K in Morse code is -.-.
The morse code for k is -.-. Morse code does not use separate patterns for uppercase and lowercase letters.
Say dah-dit-dah using a short sound for each dot and a longer sound for each dash.
Yes. Use -.- wherever the letter K appears, then add spaces between letters and a slash between words when needed.
Use the Morse Code Alphabet page for the full clickable A-Z chart.
The letter K in Morse code is -.-. Learn the written pattern, practice the dah-dit-dah sound, compare it with similar letters, and use the morse code translator whenever you want to check a complete message.
Use the homepage morse code translator to convert text, decode dots and dashes, play audio, and check spacing before you copy a message.