Dash...four letter word
Dot...three letter word
The four-letter elements are gold,lead, neon, iron and zinc.The elements that start with B are barium, berkelium, beryllium, bismuth, bohrium, boron and bromine.So the answer is none.
An four letter abbreviation for Connecticut is Conn.
Two four letter words for fruit that have an 'l' in them are plum and lime.
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seer
no they are qall mixed up
four dots is H
Sarah Elizabeth Griswold. She was a deaf woman and they had four children together. He first created Morse Code because of her. The way he communicated with her was by tapping on the table (Morse Code). She was very influential to him.
Morse code is actually a kind of cipher where patterns of long and short stand for the letters of the alphabet as well as numbers. For example, the pattern . . . stands for the letter "S" and the pattern _ _ _ stands for the letter "O" so that . . . _ _ _ . . . stands for SOS, the distress signal. In the Second World War, the first four notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony were used as a symbol for victory as the rhythm is the same as the Morse for "V" (short-short-short-long)
Samuel FB Morse devised both the telegraph system and the code. the mode of code- that is dots and dashes was more or less discovered accidentally, the code itself was not. They used printing telegraphs which were clockwork tape registers ( this being the l840"s) and these were tied into the power supply so the shortest interval was a dot, a longer one, a dash. So, this being understood the Code was worked out. There are differences between the original Morse Code and the modern International Morse Code on some letters and punctuations. Somewhat oddly, one of the best-known Morse ciphers- the code for Red Alert: - - - - Four longs, evenly spaced- is not in the original land line (Morse) or international ( Radio-telegraph) forms of the Morse Code, but it well known. Four Longs- Red Alert! Even Spector used it in some of his songs.
Beethoven's Fifth Symphony features a famous four-note motif that resembles the Morse code for the letter "V," which is represented as "· · · —." This motif, consisting of three short notes followed by a long note, has been interpreted as a symbol of victory and triumph, especially during World War II when it was adopted by the Allies. The similarity between the musical motif and Morse code highlights the universal themes of struggle and perseverance present in both the symphony and the historical context in which it was later embraced.
ununquadium - a radioactive transuranic element
code
name, code, mark
secret writing= code
Because the opening four notes of Beethoven's 5th are the same as the Morse Code for the letter 'V' (dot, dot, dot, dash), V for Victory.
zinc (It's bluish-white.)