Word practice

Morse Code Word Trainer

Repeat custom words, built-in word lists, and weak words with shuffled prompts, audio playback, typed answers, and focused review rounds.

Training deck

Setup, copy, review

Active deck

Copy the Morse word

Progress

0 / 10

Prompt

-.. .. -

Type the plain word that matches the Morse prompt.

Word trainer spec

How this Morse code word trainer works

The word trainer turns a list into a shuffled practice deck. Each prompt can be copied by sight, played as audio, answered in either direction, and sent into weak-word review when it needs more repetition.

Current pattern

-.. .. -

Whole-word practice builds useful chunks after alphabet drills.

Deck based
Each round uses a shuffled deck so you do not memorize the order.
Two answer modes
Copy Morse to text or encode the word back into Morse.
Weak-word loop
Misses become a focused review list you can copy or replay.

Word source

Lists

Choose beginner, classroom, radio, or custom words. Custom lists accept new lines and commas, dedupe repeated entries, and stay local to your browser.

Recall direction

Modes

Morse to text is best for reading and copying. Text to Morse is better when you want to write clean code from memory and catch spacing mistakes.

Listening support

Audio

Every prompt can be played as Morse audio. Character speed controls the signal shape, while Farnsworth spacing slows only the gaps for learners.

Next action

Review

Weak words can be copied into the printable worksheet builder, audio practice, or the Morse word search builder. That makes each missed prompt useful after the session ends.

Word trainer guide

Use this page for targeted word repetition

Word training narrows practice to vocabulary. It is useful when single characters are familiar but specific words still slow down recall.

Who it is for

Learners who want custom word lists, repeated weak words, and word-level recall before moving into sentence or audio drills.

What it does

The trainer builds a shuffled deck, shows or plays each word, checks typed answers, and saves misses into a weak-word review round.

How to use it

Choose a built-in or custom list, pick the answer direction, listen or read the prompt, then repeat missed words until they stop feeling slow.

Worked examples

Word trainer scenarios

Use word-level practice when the problem is a repeatable vocabulary set, not a full sentence yet.

Custom word list

SIGNAL / RADIO / COPY

Paste words you actually need for a class, contact, worksheet, or puzzle so the practice round matches the vocabulary you care about.

Weak-word review

MISSED WORDS

After a miss, keep the word in the weak deck and run a shorter review round before returning to the full list.

Words to sentences

COPY -> COPY THIS MESSAGE

Once a word is reliable by itself, move it into sentence practice so you also train context and word gaps.
Use it well

Common word practice mistakes

Word drills work best when the list is focused and the next step is clear.

Using too many custom words

Keep custom lists short enough to repeat. A smaller set exposes weak words faster than a long mixed list.

Skipping weak-word rounds

A missed word should come back soon. Use the weak deck before starting a new full list.

Staying at word level too long

When words are reliable, move to sentence or audio practice so recall transfers into real message flow.
Next step

Move weak words into the right next drill

After word review, choose the next mode based on what still feels difficult: typing, listening, or sentence flow.

Practice path

Use word practice after alphabet drills

Alphabet recall tells you whether you know each symbol. Word practice tells you whether you can recognize useful chunks quickly enough to read real messages.

Start with quick Morse drills when individual letters still feel slow. Move here once common symbols are familiar enough to combine into short words.

Use Morse-to-text mode for copy practice, then switch to text-to-Morse when you want to prove the spacing yourself. If a word keeps breaking your rhythm, add it to weak review and use the same list in audio practice, sentence practice, or a printable sheet.

Teachers can paste weekly vocabulary, radio clubs can paste Q-codes and callsign words, and puzzle makers can turn a review list into a Morse word search where clues are Morse and answers are hidden in a letter grid.

FAQ

Word trainer FAQ

What is the Morse code word trainer for?>

The word trainer is for word-level repetition. It helps you practice custom words, built-in lists, audio playback, typed answers, and weak-word review without switching to sentence prompts.

Can I practice my own word list?>

Yes. Choose Custom and paste words separated by commas or new lines. MorseWords keeps the custom list locally in your browser.

What should I do with weak words?>

Turn missed words into a weak-word round, replay them as audio, copy the list, or clear the list after review. Weak words are useful because they make the next session specific.

How is the word trainer different from sentence practice?>

The word trainer repeats isolated words and weak vocabulary. Sentence practice adds full phrases, context, and word-gap rhythm.

Should I use word training before audio practice?>

Use word training first when the vocabulary itself is weak. Move to audio practice when the words are familiar enough and the next challenge is recognizing them by ear.

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