Audio test

Morse Code Audio Quiz

Test listening recall with hidden Morse audio prompts, answer checks, score feedback, and a clear path back to practice.

Question 1/10Attempts 0Accuracy 0%Streak 0
Word

Playback

Hidden prompt

Easy Word

Listen to the signal, then type what you copied. The answer stays hidden until you check it.

Prompt stays hidden until you check. Press Ctrl+Enter to check or continue.

Answer by ear before checking.

Playback Settings

Ready
18 WPM
18 WPM
600 Hz
75 %
Audio quiz spec

How this Morse code audio quiz works

The audio quiz hides each prompt, plays the Morse signal, and scores your copied answer. It is a fixed test, unlike open-ended audio practice.

Hidden signal

... --- ...

Listen first, answer from memory, then check.

Ten hidden prompts
Each run uses a shuffled deck from the selected difficulty level.
Skill check
Score, attempts, accuracy, skips, streak, and best streak show how well you copied by ear.
Local audio
Playback and answer checking stay in the browser; only the difficulty and best streak are saved locally.

Prompt bank

Difficulty

Beginner focuses on letters, numbers, and tiny groups. Easy adds short words and common signals. Medium adds longer words and sentences. Hard adds Q-codes and tougher copy.

Result summary

Scoring

A checked answer counts as an attempt. Correct answers raise your score and streak. Skipped prompts move the quiz forward without adding a correct answer.

Copy speed

Timing

Character speed sets the dit and dah rhythm. Farnsworth spacing slows only the gaps, so you can test at a realistic character rhythm while giving yourself more copy time.

Next step

Practice

If the quiz feels rough, switch to audio practice. It uses the same prompt bank and timing controls but keeps the session open-ended for repetition.

Audio quiz guide

Use this page to test listening recall

The audio quiz is a scored checkpoint. It keeps prompts hidden, plays the signal, checks your answer, and turns results into a clearer next practice choice.

Who it is for

Learners who have practiced by ear and now want a fixed score instead of open-ended repetition.

What it tests

Listening recall, answer accuracy, difficulty readiness, streak consistency, and whether current timing settings are workable.

How to use it

Choose a difficulty, play each hidden prompt, answer from memory, and use the final score to decide what to repeat.

Worked examples

Audio quiz scenarios

Use the quiz when a measurable result helps you choose the next drill.

Known character set

E T A N S O

Test a difficulty only after the underlying character set feels familiar in practice mode.

Score feedback

7 / 10

A score near the middle means the level is useful but still needs repetition before increasing speed or difficulty.

Return after misses

QUIZ -> PRACTICE

Missed prompts should become the next audio practice or word trainer set instead of another blind quiz run.
Use it well

Common audio quiz mistakes

A quiz is useful when it measures practiced skill, not when it becomes guessing.

Testing too early

If you miss most prompts, move back to audio practice and lower difficulty before retesting.

Changing every setting

Adjust one variable at a time. Changing speed, Farnsworth, pitch, and waveform together makes results harder to interpret.

Ignoring the miss pattern

A final score is less useful than the pattern behind it. Review whether misses came from speed, words, or listening fatigue.
Next step

Use the score to choose the next session

A quiz should create a decision: repeat by ear, review words, adjust timing, or move into sentence-level practice.

After the test

Use the score to pick the next drill

If accuracy is low, drop one difficulty level and run open-ended audio practice. If accuracy is steady, move into sentence practice or a faster WPM setting.

FAQ

Audio quiz FAQ

Is the Morse code audio quiz scored?>

Yes. The audio quiz uses a fixed run, checks typed answers, and tracks score, attempts, accuracy, streak, and shareable results.

Should beginners start with quiz mode?>

Beginners should usually start with audio practice first. Use the quiz when you want a test-like check of listening recall.

What should I do after missed audio quiz answers?>

Drop the difficulty, return to audio practice for repetition, or move missed words into the word trainer before taking another quiz.

How is the audio quiz different from audio practice?>

Audio practice is open-ended and built for repetition. The audio quiz is a fixed scored test, so it is better for checking your current listening level.

Does pitch affect the correct answer?>

No. Pitch changes the tone you hear, not the dots, dashes, letters, or correct decoded answer.

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