Cjk Unified Ideograph-3760 Letter
㝠 is a CJK unified ideograph character (U+3760) used in East Asian text and typography.
U+3760
㝠 is a single CJK character with the Unicode code point U+3760. It’s useful when you need the exact glyph for East Asian text, references, or typographic work. Below you’ll find practical ways to copy it and where it commonly appears.
Cjk Unified Ideograph-3760 Letter Meaning
㝠 is a CJK unified ideograph identified in Unicode as “CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-3760” (U+3760). Like many unified ideographs, its specific meaning depends on the language, font, and the words or characters it appears with. In general usage, it may be encountered as part of Japanese or Chinese text, in names, classical or specialized writing, or in older/less common character forms. If you’re working with documents or datasets, the most reliable way to interpret 㝠 is by using its surrounding characters and the target language context.
Common uses
- •Copying an exact CJK character into a document, note, or citation
- •Using the character in web content where a specific glyph must match (U+3760)
- •Typography and font testing for CJK character coverage
- •Labeling items in datasets or glossaries where exact character fidelity matters
- •Including the character in social media or design mockups that require precise text
Examples
㝠 (CJK Unified Ideograph) — Copy & Unicode Info
- 㝠「㝠」
- 㝠The character 㝠 appears in the provided text.
- 㝠Please verify 㝠 matches U+3760 in the source.
- 㝠In the glossary, 㝠 is listed under the same heading.
- 㝠Typography check: render 㝠 with the chosen font.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+3760 | |
| HTML Entity | 㝠 | |
| HTML Code | 㝠 | |
| CSS | \3760 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode code point for 㝠?
㝠 is encoded as U+3760.
How can I copy 㝠 in HTML?
You can use the HTML entity 㝠 (as provided), or copy the character directly.
What does “CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-3760” mean?
It is Unicode’s official name for this character. The “3760” part is the identifier for the code point U+3760.
Will 㝠 display correctly on my device or website?
It depends on font support. If the font lacks the glyph, it may not render as intended; always test with the target fonts.