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Hangul Choseong Pieup-nieun Letter

ᄟ (U+111F) is a Hangul choseong letter used as an initial consonant component in Korean syllable blocks.

U+111F

ᄟ is a Hangul choseong character. In Korean writing systems, it represents an initial consonant component used to build full Hangul syllables. Use it when working directly with Hangul Jamo or when you need the standalone choseong form.

Hangul Choseong Pieup-nieun Letter Meaning

ᄟ is named HANGUL CHOSEONG PIEUP-NIEUN (Unicode U+111F). It belongs to the Hangul Jamo block and acts as an initial consonant component (choseong) rather than a complete syllable by itself. In typical Korean text, choseong characters are combined with a vowel (jungseong) and sometimes a final consonant (jongseong) to form modern Hangul syllable blocks. When you handle Hangul at the character level (for fonts, normalization, or linguistic processing), you may encounter or need to enter ᄟ as the standalone initial jamo value.

Common uses

  • Building Hangul syllables from individual Jamo components in software and scripts
  • Font testing and typography checks for Hangul Jamo rendering
  • Linguistic or educational content that demonstrates Hangul onset (choseong) parts
  • Text normalization, normalization testing, or encoding/decoding workflows that use Unicode code points
  • Designing or searching UI content that requires exact Hangul Jamo characters

Examples

ᄟ Hangul Choseong Pieup-Nieun

  • ᄟㅏ = a syllable built from choseong plus vowel
  • The choseong ᄟ is part of Hangul Jamo U+111F.
  • Font preview shows ᄟ as an initial consonant component.
  • I’m working with Unicode Jamo: ᄟ in the Hangul block.
  • Insert ᄟ when you need the standalone choseong form.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+111F
HTML Entityᄟ
HTML Codeᄟ
CSS\111F

FAQ

What does the Hangul Choseong Pieup-nieun letter mean?

ᄟ is named HANGUL CHOSEONG PIEUP-NIEUN (Unicode U+111F). It belongs to the Hangul Jamo block and acts as an initial consonant component (choseong) rather than a complete syllable by itself. In typical Korean text, choseong characters are combined with a vowel (jungseong) and sometimes a final consonant (jongseong) to form modern Hangul syllable blocks. When you handle Hangul at the character level (for fonts, normalization, or linguistic processing), you may encounter or need to enter ᄟ as the standalone initial jamo value.

Is ᄟ a complete Korean syllable?

No. ᄟ is a Hangul choseong (initial consonant) Jamo. It typically combines with vowel (jungseong) and optionally final consonant (jongseong) to form a complete Hangul syllable.

What is the Unicode code point for ᄟ?

The Unicode code point is U+111F.

How can I copy ᄟ on the web?

You can copy the character directly (ᄟ), or use the HTML entity ᄟ or the Unicode escapes \\111F / \\u{111F} depending on your environment.

Where does ᄟ belong in Unicode?

It is in the Hangul (Korean) Jamo range as a Hangul choseong named HANGUL CHOSEONG PIEUP-NIEUN.