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Halfwidth Hangul Letter Ssangsios Letter

ᄊ (U+FFB6) is a halfwidth Hangul character used when halfwidth forms are required.

U+FFB6

ᄊ is a Halfwidth Hangul Letter SSANGSIOS character. It has the Unicode code point U+FFB6 and can be copied directly into many text editors. Use it when you need halfwidth Hangul forms for compatibility or typography.

Halfwidth Hangul Letter Ssangsios Letter Meaning

ᄊ (HALFWIDTH HANGUL LETTER SSANGSIOS, U+FFB6) is a compatibility/halfwidth Hangul character. The “halfwidth” form is meant for contexts where characters are displayed in a halfwidth style, often seen in older terminals, legacy encodings, or specific typography layouts. Like other Hangul letters, it represents a particular Jamo letter identity (ssangsiOs) in the halfwidth block rather than being a punctuation or symbol with an independent metaphorical meaning. If you are working with East Asian fixed-width layouts, this character can help preserve spacing and alignment.

Common uses

  • Copying halfwidth Hangul into terminal-like or fixed-width displays
  • UI mockups and form fields that require halfwidth character alignment
  • Legacy text conversions where fullwidth characters would break layout
  • Displaying or cataloging Unicode characters in documentation or tools
  • Social posts or comments that intentionally use halfwidth Hangul styling

Examples

ᄊ Halfwidth Hangul Letter SsangsiO s

  • test: ᄊ
  • halfwidth_hangul: ᄊ
  • layout check: ᄊ ᄊ ᄊ
  • character code U+FFB6: ᄊ

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+FFB6
HTML Entityᄊ
HTML Codeᄊ
CSS\FFB6

FAQ

What is the Unicode code point for ᄊ?

ᄊ is U+FFB6 (HALFWIDTH HANGUL LETTER SSANGSIOS).

How can I copy ᄊ into my document?

Copy the character directly (ᄊ) from this page, or use the HTML entity ᄊ.

What does “halfwidth” mean here?

It refers to the halfwidth form used for characters in the halfwidth Hangul block, often to fit fixed-width or legacy-style layouts.

Will ᄊ look the same in every font?

Not always. Rendering depends on the font and environment, and some fonts may not support halfwidth Hangul equally.