Cjk Unified Ideograph-359E Letter
㖞 is a CJK unified ideograph identified by Unicode code point U+359E.
U+359E
㖞 is a Unicode character from the CJK (Chinese/Japanese) Unified Ideographs block. It’s useful when you’re working with text that contains specific East Asian characters. Below you’ll find copy options and the exact code points for U+359E.
Cjk Unified Ideograph-359E Letter Meaning
㖞 is not a standalone Latin-letter symbol; it is a CJK unified ideograph with the Unicode identity “CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-359E” (U+359E). Like other unified ideographs, its exact reading or meaning depends on the specific language and font/orthography context where it appears (e.g., a particular character used in Chinese or Japanese texts). Practically, you can treat 㖞 as a precise character token for search, display, and data exchange. Use its code point (U+359E) when building tools, entering it into a text field, or generating content that must match an existing document.
Common uses
- •Copying the exact CJK character into documents, forms, or datasets that require U+359E
- •Displaying or rendering East Asian text in web pages, apps, and UI mockups
- •Using the Unicode code point in programming to generate the character consistently
- •Referencing the character in linguistic or typographic notes where exact identity matters
- •Sharing the character in social posts or comments when quoting specific source text
Examples
㖞 (CJK Unified Ideograph-359E)
- 㖞Here is the character: 㖞
- 㖞Unicode U+359E corresponds to 㖞.
- 㖞I found 㖞 in the original text.
- 㖞Type \u0000 by entering its code point U+359E.
- 㖞The dataset includes 㖞 for an East Asian term.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+359E | |
| HTML Entity | 㖞 | |
| HTML Code | 㖞 | |
| CSS | \359E |
FAQ
What is the Unicode code point for 㖞?
㖞 corresponds to Unicode code point U+359E.
How can I copy 㖞 easily?
Use the character shown on this page (㖞) and copy/paste it directly. You can also copy the HTML entity (㖞) or use the escape forms.
What does “CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-359E” mean?
It’s the Unicode name for the character. “CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH” identifies it as part of the unified ideographs used across CJK scripts.
Will the character look the same on every device?
Not always. The glyph appearance depends on the installed fonts and rendering support for U+359E, even though the character identity remains U+359E.