Letters, digits, punctuation marks, and special codes (i.e. characters) are represented by sequences of short and/or long pulses separated by short gaps. Short pulses are called dots and pronounced as "di" except at the end of a character, where they are pronounced as "dit". Long pulses are called dashes and are pronounced as "dah". Characters are separated by long gaps.
no they are qall mixed up
The letter "T" in Morse code is represented by 1 dash.
Q is represented as "--.-" in International Morse Code.
International Morse ' Q ' : _ _ . _
The letter E is represented by a single dot when using Morse Code.
It is the letter M.
It is the letter M.
S
E in international Morse code (please note there are 3 kinds of Morse code) is the simplest of all Morse code letters, as it is the most common letter in English. It would just be a simple dot: .
Computer don't have Morse code. They use something called Binary Code. It uses 1s and 0s for the letters whereas Morse code uses dots and dashes.
Morse Code is sometimes written with a slash between letters to avoid getting the letters confused. A double slash means a space between words.
The patterns at the end of the question, if interpreted as Morse Code, represent the letters: T O T