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Hangul Choseong Ieung-thieuth Letter

ᅊ is the Hangul choseong character “Ieung-Thieuth” (U+114A).

U+114A

ᅊ is a single Hangul choseong letter used when composing Korean syllables. It corresponds to Unicode code point U+114A. Use it for typography, text samples, or when working directly with Hangul Jamo.

Hangul Choseong Ieung-thieuth Letter Meaning

ᅊ represents the Hangul choseong “Ieung-Thieuth” and is part of the Korean Hangul Jamo set. In standard Korean writing, syllables are typically assembled from leading consonants (choseong), vowels (jungseong), and optional trailing consonants (jongseong). When you place ᅊ by itself, it functions as a standalone Jamo character rather than a complete syllable block. This is useful for linguistic work, font testing, and displaying or manipulating Hangul components directly.

Common uses

  • Typing or displaying Hangul Jamo directly in educational materials
  • Testing fonts and glyph rendering for Unicode Hangul Jamo
  • Creating text samples for Korean typography or UI mockups
  • Working with Unicode data when you need the choseong component explicitly
  • Copy/pasting a specific Jamo in design tools or code snippets

Examples

ᅊ Hangul Choseong Ieung-Thieuth

  • Hangul Jamo: ᅊ
  • Unicode Jamo U+114A: ᅊ
  • Choseong example: ᅊ
  • Testing glyphs with ᅊ

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+114A
HTML Entityᅊ
HTML Codeᅊ
CSS\114A

FAQ

What does the Hangul Choseong Ieung-thieuth letter mean?

ᅊ represents the Hangul choseong “Ieung-Thieuth” and is part of the Korean Hangul Jamo set. In standard Korean writing, syllables are typically assembled from leading consonants (choseong), vowels (jungseong), and optional trailing consonants (jongseong). When you place ᅊ by itself, it functions as a standalone Jamo character rather than a complete syllable block. This is useful for linguistic work, font testing, and displaying or manipulating Hangul components directly.

What is the Unicode code point for ᅊ?

ᅊ is U+114A (Hangul Choseong Ieung-Thieuth).

How can I copy ᅊ for use in code?

You can copy the character directly, or use escapes like CSS \\114A or JavaScript \\u{114A}.

Is ᅊ a complete Korean syllable by itself?

No. It is a single Hangul choseong Jamo component. Full syllables are typically assembled from multiple Jamo.

Where might I use this character outside of normal Korean text?

Common uses include linguistic examples, Unicode/typography testing, font glyph checks, and working with Hangul components directly in design or software.