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Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-fa21 Letter

﨡 is the Unicode character CJK Compatibility Ideograph FA21 (U+FA21).

U+FA21

﨡 is a CJK Compatibility Ideograph in Unicode. Because it is a compatibility character, it’s mainly used when you need this exact code point for legacy or compatibility text.

Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-fa21 Letter Meaning

﨡 is the Unicode character named “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-FA21” with code point U+FA21. Characters in the “CJK Compatibility Ideograph” block are designed to preserve compatibility with older standards and legacy forms. In practice, you’ll encounter 﨡 when working with archived documents, systems that use compatibility mappings, or text that was produced with a specific legacy encoding. For most modern writing, you typically shouldn’t “substitute” it with look-alike characters—use it when the exact code point is required to match the original data. If your font doesn’t support it, you may see a missing-glyph box.

Common uses

  • Copying legacy CJK text that contains the exact U+FA21 character
  • Replacing a missing symbol in digitized documents where compatibility forms were preserved
  • Ensuring consistent display in applications that depend on exact Unicode code points
  • Debugging encoding or font issues when a specific CJK compatibility ideograph is expected
  • Using the character in UI text where a compatibility form is required by the source data

Examples

﨡 CJK Compatibility Ideograph FA21

  • Text: 﨡
  • Legacy form: 﨡
  • Codepoint check: U+FA21 﨡
  • Sample string: A﨡B
  • Compatibility text: 﨡 123

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+FA21
HTML Entity﨡
HTML Code﨡
CSS\FA21

FAQ

What does the Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-fa21 letter mean?

﨡 is the Unicode character named “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-FA21” with code point U+FA21. Characters in the “CJK Compatibility Ideograph” block are designed to preserve compatibility with older standards and legacy forms. In practice, you’ll encounter 﨡 when working with archived documents, systems that use compatibility mappings, or text that was produced with a specific legacy encoding. For most modern writing, you typically shouldn’t “substitute” it with look-alike characters—use it when the exact code point is required to match the original data. If your font doesn’t support it, you may see a missing-glyph box.

How do I copy 﨡 (U+FA21) correctly?

Copy the character directly from this page as “﨡”, or use one of the provided escape forms (HTML: 﨡, CSS: \\FA21, JavaScript: \\u{FA21}).

Why is it called a “compatibility ideograph”?

It belongs to the Unicode compatibility ideograph set, which exists to preserve compatibility with older encodings or forms. That’s why the exact character (U+FA21) matters.

My browser/app shows a box instead of 﨡. What should I do?

Check that your font supports this code point. Many default fonts may not include all CJK compatibility characters, so switching to a full CJK font can fix display.

Can I replace 﨡 with a similar-looking CJK character?

Avoid substitution unless you know the exact mapping for your source text. Compatibility characters are used when the original code point must be preserved, so use 﨡 when U+FA21 is required.