free-symbols
🆀

Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q Letter

🆀 is an enclosed, circled “Q” character labeled as the Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q.

U+1F180

🆀 is a Unicode emoji-style character from the “Enclosed & Circled” set. It shows a capital “Q” inside a negative (reversed) square design.

Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q Letter Meaning

🆀 represents the “Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q” Unicode character. In practice, it’s often used as a visual label for something named or coded with a “Q,” while the “negative squared” styling helps it stand out like a button, badge, or status marker. Because it’s an enclosed character, it works well in lists, UI mockups, and quick messages where you want a compact icon-like element rather than plain text. Its most common meaning is simply “Q” in a distinctive, enclosed form—useful when you want consistency in design and typography across platforms.

Common uses

  • Use as a compact badge/icon for a “Q” option in menus or forms
  • Label a quiz, queue, or question section in messages and documents
  • Design game or app UI states where a “Q” needs visual emphasis
  • Create consistent status tags in spreadsheets, labels, and workflows
  • Add a stylized “Q” marker in posters, slides, and social graphics

Examples

🆀 Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q

  • 🆀Pick 🆀 for the quick question mode.
  • 🆀Queue: 🆀 (position updates every minute).
  • 🆀Level selector: 🆀 = “Question Pack”.
  • 🆀Ticket type 🆀 requires additional details.
  • 🆀Choose option 🆀 to continue.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F180
HTML Entity🆀
HTML Code🆀
CSS\1F180

FAQ

What is 🆀 called?

It’s called “Negative Squared Latin Capital Letter Q.”

What Unicode character is 🆀?

It is Unicode U+1F180.

Can I copy/paste 🆀 in web and apps?

Yes. You can paste the symbol directly, or use the provided HTML entity (🆀) or JavaScript escape (\\u{1F180}).

What does 🆀 mean in messages?

Most commonly it’s used as a stylized, enclosed “Q” marker—useful for labels, options, and badges rather than a universally fixed single meaning.