Morse code by language
Morse Code by Language
Explore how Morse mappings work beyond the basic A-Z chart. Some scripts have established Morse adaptations, while other use cases rely on transliteration before sending International Morse.
Supported first set
Start with three clear Morse adaptations
This foundation keeps the list intentionally small so each page can be accurate, interactive, and printable. The copy is in English, with the target-language characters shown directly in the cards.
Kana / Wabun codeJapanese日本語 kanaStarter kana cards for Wabun code with audio and a printable side-by-side sheet.Open Japanese page ->Cyrillic / Cyrillic MorseRussianРусскийCyrillic Morse cards for Russian letters with readable transliteration notes.Open Russian page ->Greek alphabet / Greek MorseGreekΕλληνικάGreek Morse alphabet cards with native letters, readings, audio, and print output.Open Greek page ->
Adaptation vs transliteration
Not every language has a separate official alphabet
Morse can be used with different writing systems in more than one way. Japanese Wabun code maps kana to Morse patterns. Russian and Greek pages here show native-script Morse tables. For other languages, a sender may transliterate into Latin letters before using International Morse.
Next steps

