MORSE VARIANTS

Korean Morse Code (SKATS / Hangul)

Korean Morse uses SKATS: the Standard Korean Alphabet Transliteration System: to encode Hangul jamo (consonants and vowels) as Morse. Each jamo gets a unique Morse pattern, allowing Hangul syllables to be transmitted by sending each component letter.

Language: Korean Script: Hangul (jamo) Adopted: 1960 Characters: 24

Character chart

Giyeok (g)
.-..
Nieun (n)
..-.
Digeut (d)
-...
Rieul (r/l)
...-
Mieum (m)
--
Bieup (b)
.--
Siot (s)
--.
Ieung (ng)
-.-
Jieut (j)
.--.
Chieut (ch)
-.-.
Kieuk (k)
-..-
Tieut (t)
--..
Pieup (p)
---
Hieut (h)
.---
A
.
Ya
..
Eo
-
Yeo
...
O
.-
Yo
-.
U
....
Yu
.-.
Eu
-..
I
..-

History & usage

Korean Morse was developed in the early 20th century during the Japanese occupation period and standardized after Korean independence. SKATS became the definitive system for Hangul Morse in the 1960s.

South Korean amateur radio (HL-prefix) and the Republic of Korea military both teach Korean Morse for Hangul-language transmissions. North Korean military communications also use a Hangul-Morse system, with some local variations.

Časté dotazy

How does Korean Morse handle Hangul syllable blocks?

Each syllable block (e.g., 한) is decomposed into its component jamo (ㅎ + ㅏ + ㄴ) and each jamo is sent as its Morse code in order. The reader reassembles the syllable on the receiving end.

Is SKATS the same as Korean Morse?

SKATS is the underlying transliteration scheme. Korean Morse applies SKATS to Morse code by assigning each transliterated jamo a Morse pattern. In practice the terms are used interchangeably.

Where is Korean Morse used today?

South Korean ham radio for Hangul-language QSOs, the ROK military for legacy comms training, and as a curiosity in Korean scouting and computing-history education.

Other Morse variants

Wabun Code
Japanese · Katakana
Russian Morse Code
Russian (and other Cyrillic) · Cyrillic
Greek Morse Code
Greek · Greek
Arabic Morse Code
Arabic · Arabic
Hebrew Morse Code
Hebrew · Hebrew
Chinese Telegraph Code (CTC)
Chinese · Hanzi (via four-digit lookup)

Explore all Morse code variants → Morse Code Variants Around the World