✦free-symbols
πŸ… 

Negative Circled Latin Capital Letter Q Letter

πŸ…  is the negative circled Latin capital letter Q, used as an enclosed letter mark or label-style symbol.

U+1F160

The πŸ…  symbol is an enclosed, circled letter form: a negative circled Latin capital letter Q. It’s handy when you need a compact, badge-like character for UI labels, documents, or graphic elements. Below you’ll find meaning, common uses, and ready-to-copy variations.

Negative Circled Latin Capital Letter Q Letter Meaning

πŸ…  (NEGATIVE CIRCLED LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q, U+1F160) is an enclosed & circled character that combines a capital β€œQ” with a circled presentation in a β€œnegative” style. In practice, it’s most often used as a distinctive marker: a label, category badge, or compact icon-like letter. Because it’s a single Unicode character, it can be used consistently across modern platforms that support the same emoji/font rendering. You’ll commonly see it in interface mockups, captions, or typographic icon sets where designers want a circled-letter look rather than a plain β€œQ”.

Common uses

  • β€’Badge-style labeling for sections, steps, or categories marked with Q
  • β€’Icon or marker in UI mockups where a circled letter fits the layout
  • β€’Design elements in posters, slides, and infographics that use circled letters
  • β€’Document or form labeling (e.g., β€œQuestion Q”) when you want a stylized mark
  • β€’Social or creator graphics as a compact, recognizable Q symbol

Examples

πŸ…  Negative Circled Latin Capital Letter Q

  • πŸ… Section πŸ… : Quality checklist
  • πŸ… Step πŸ…  β€” Review results
  • πŸ… Category πŸ… : Questions
  • πŸ… Use option πŸ…  to enable the feature
  • πŸ… Updated in πŸ…  build 3

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F160
HTML Entity🅠
HTML Code🅠
CSS\1F160

FAQ

What does the Negative Circled Latin Capital Letter Q letter mean?

πŸ…  (NEGATIVE CIRCLED LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q, U+1F160) is an enclosed & circled character that combines a capital β€œQ” with a circled presentation in a β€œnegative” style. In practice, it’s most often used as a distinctive marker: a label, category badge, or compact icon-like letter. Because it’s a single Unicode character, it can be used consistently across modern platforms that support the same emoji/font rendering. You’ll commonly see it in interface mockups, captions, or typographic icon sets where designers want a circled-letter look rather than a plain β€œQ”.

What is the Unicode code point for πŸ… ?

πŸ…  is U+1F160 (NEGATIVE CIRCLED LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Q).

How can I copy and use πŸ…  in HTML?

You can paste the character directly, or use the HTML entity: 🅠.

How do I reference πŸ…  in CSS or JavaScript?

CSS escape: \\1F160. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F160}.

Why might πŸ…  look different on different devices?

Like other Unicode emoji-style characters, rendering depends on available fonts and platform support. Some platforms may display it with different styling while keeping the same code point.

Related symbols