Letter guide

X in Morse Code

X in Morse code is -..-. It is spoken as dah-di-di-dah when you practice by sound.

Direct answer

Letter X

X in Morse code is -..-. It is spoken as dah-di-di-dah when you practice by sound.

Plain text

X

Morse

-..-

Rhythm

dah-di-di-dah

Quick breakdown

X-..-

X is spoken as dah-di-di-dah.

Letter details

What X is in Morse code

X starts long, has two short marks in the middle, and closes long. The matching long marks frame the letter.

Character
X
Dot dash pattern
-..-
Spoken rhythm
dah-di-di-dah

How it sounds

Hear the framed rhythm

X has a long opening and long ending, with two short marks between them.

If the middle collapses to one short mark, the rhythm moves toward K.

How to type it

Use keyboard-safe marks

Type -..- with periods for dots and hyphens for dashes.

Keep letter gaps visible

Add a space after the letter when typing a word so the next Morse character stays separate.

Avoid mixups

Common mistakes and confused letters

Small spacing or mark-count changes can turn one Morse letter into another.

K is long-short-long. X adds one more short mark in the middle.

D starts the same but stops after the two short marks. X adds a final dah.

Examples

Words that contain X

Use short words to practice the letter in real context instead of memorizing it only as a lookup.

X

-..-

X by itself is the cleanest way to check the pattern.

TEXT

- . -..- -

TEXT gives you X inside a short word instead of as an isolated lookup.

FOX

..-. --- -..-

FOX gives you X inside a short word instead of as an isolated lookup.

XRAY

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

XRAY gives you X inside a short word instead of as an isolated lookup.

Mini practice

Practice X by framing the middle

Alternate X, K, and D, then encode TEXT, FOX, and XRAY.

Listening drill

Play X, K, and D. Listen for the long mark at the end and count the middle dits.

Typing drill

Encode TEXT, FOX, and XRAY, then check that X has the closing dah.

Next steps

Keep practicing X

Compare nearby letters, hear the signal, then move from lookup to recall in the tools.

FAQ

X in Morse Code FAQ

Quick answers for spacing, supported characters, and decoding pasted Morse.

What is X in Morse code?>

X in Morse code is -..-.

How do you say X in Morse rhythm?>

X is commonly spoken as dah-di-di-dah when practicing the sound pattern.

Can I type X in Morse code?>

Yes. Type -..- with periods for dots and hyphens for dashes, then keep spaces between letters when you type a word.

Should I learn X by sight or sound?>

Use -..- for quick lookup, then practice X as the dah-di-di-dah sound so it becomes recognizable by ear.

What should I compare X with?>

X is often confused with K and D. K has only one short mark in the middle, while D has no closing dah.

How should I practice X?>

Practice X by comparing it with K and D, then encode words where X appears at the end, such as FOX.

Morse code navigation

Explore the Morse code toolkit

Jump between the translator, encoder, decoder, practice pages, printable worksheets, audio tools, and Morse code reference guides.

View the full MorseWords toolkit+

Core Morse tools

Learn by doing

Reference and output tools

Helpful Morse code pages