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Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-phieuph Letter

ᆵ is the Halfwidth Hangul letter Rieul-Phieuph (U+FFAF), used to represent a specific Hangul consonant in halfwidth form.

U+FFAF

This symbol is a halfwidth Hangul character used in text systems that support compatibility forms. It has a specific Unicode code point, making it reliable for copy/paste and developer use. Below you’ll find practical examples and ready-to-use copy options.

Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-phieuph Letter Meaning

ᆵ (Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-Phieuph) is a Unicode halfwidth Hangul character, with code point U+FFAF. “Halfwidth” indicates it belongs to a compatibility set designed for narrower, single-cell style rendering in certain fonts and legacy encodings. Rieul-Phieuph refers to a Hangul consonant cluster-like letter form used in the language’s orthography and transcription conventions. In practice, you’ll see it when a system outputs halfwidth Hangul instead of fullwidth Hangul, such as older terminals, East Asian typography workflows, or data exported from legacy sources.

Common uses

  • Copy/paste the exact halfwidth Hangul letter for UI mockups or form fields that require halfwidth characters
  • Preserve text fidelity when working with legacy datasets that store compatibility Hangul forms
  • Label technical content (e.g., character lists, Unicode tables, or font-spec sheets) accurately
  • Create consistent search/testing strings for systems that treat halfwidth and fullwidth characters differently
  • Use in developer workflows where you must reference the character by its Unicode code point (U+FFAF)

Examples

ᆵ Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-Phieuph

  • Halfwidth set: ᆵ
  • Unicode U+FFAF: ᆵ
  • Character list item: ᆵ
  • Legacy export contains: ᆵ
  • Test string: ᆵ 123

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+FFAF
HTML Entityᆵ
HTML Codeᆵ
CSS\FFAF

FAQ

What does the Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-phieuph letter mean?

ᆵ (Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-Phieuph) is a Unicode halfwidth Hangul character, with code point U+FFAF. “Halfwidth” indicates it belongs to a compatibility set designed for narrower, single-cell style rendering in certain fonts and legacy encodings. Rieul-Phieuph refers to a Hangul consonant cluster-like letter form used in the language’s orthography and transcription conventions. In practice, you’ll see it when a system outputs halfwidth Hangul instead of fullwidth Hangul, such as older terminals, East Asian typography workflows, or data exported from legacy sources.

What Unicode character is ᆵ?

ᆵ is the Halfwidth Hangul Letter Rieul-Phieuph, with Unicode code point U+FFAF.

How do I copy ᆵ correctly?

You can copy the character directly from this page, or use the provided HTML entity ᆵ / code forms like \\\\FFAF or \\\\u{FFAF}.

Is ᆵ the same as a fullwidth Hangul letter?

No. ᆵ is a halfwidth (compatibility) Hangul character. Fullwidth Hangul characters use different code points and may render differently.

Where might I encounter ᆵ in real text?

You may see it in legacy or compatibility exports, terminal output, or font/encoding workflows that specifically use halfwidth Hangul.