Last updated: May 18, 2025
Numbered list from 1 to 10 using English letters
An online tool for creating English-letter lists that builds sequences from 1 to 10 in seconds.
Handy for dropping letter sequences into Excel, marking sub-items in documents, or preparing a question template. Supports vertical or horizontal layout, multiple delimiters, case choice (upper/lower), and wrapping.
How to make a 1–10 letter list
The range 1–10
is automatically converted to English letters. Follow four steps:
- Format: pick “Column” or “Row”.
- Delimiter: comma, period, dash, space, “/”, “|”, or your own symbol.
- Preview: the result appears instantly in the preview field.
- Generate & copy: click “Generate”, then “Copy”.
Extra options
Interval (step): enter an integer, e.g. 2 → B, D, F…
or 3 → C, F, I…
.
Case: select Uppercase
or Lowercase
.
Wrapping: set characters before and after letters (brackets, quotes, etc.).
Delimiters
No delimiter is needed for vertical layout. Otherwise choose a standard one or “Custom”.
Type | Symbol | Example |
---|---|---|
Comma | , | A,B,C,D,E |
Comma + space | , | A, B, C, D, E |
Space | ␣ | A B C D E |
Dash | – | A–B–C–D–E |
Period | . | A.B.C.D.E |
Period + space | . | A. B. C. D. E |
Vertical bar | | | A|B|C|D|E |
Slash | / | A/B/C/D/E |
Wrapping
No wrapping by default. To add brackets or other marks, choose “Custom” and enter the symbols.
Type | Before | After | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Parentheses | ( | ) | (A) |
Square brackets | [ | ] | [A] |
Curly braces | { | } | {A} |
Angle brackets | < | > | <A> |
Can’t find the right symbol? Choose “Custom” and enter your own delimiters or wrapping.
Examples
Document sub-items: A, B, C…
Test answer options: A), B), C)…
Appendix labels: Appendix A, Appendix B…
Series labels on charts: Series A, Series B…
Column headings: A, B, C…
FAQ
Export to .csv or .txt?
After generating the list, click “Save to file” and pick the format you need.
Add a prefix to the letters?
In “Wrapping” enter a prefix, e.g. Sec-
.
Interval numbering (A, C, E…)?
In “Interval” set the step (e.g. 2). With a 1–10 range you’ll get A, C, E…
.