Hangul Choseong Ssangpieup Letter
ᄈ is the Hangul Choseong (initial consonant) letter called Ssangpieup.
U+1108
ᄈ is a Hangul Jamo used in Korean writing. Specifically, it represents an initial consonant (choseong) called ssangpieup. You can copy it directly or use its Unicode codes in software and web projects.
Hangul Choseong Ssangpieup Letter Meaning
ᄈ (U+1108) is the Hangul Choseong Ssangpieup. In Hangul, choseong letters form the leading consonant part of a syllable block. The “ssang” prefix indicates a tense or doubled consonant form relative to the basic pieup family. Like other jamo characters, ᄈ is commonly seen when working with Korean text at the component level (for example, in normalization, indexing, fonts, or linguistic data). In typical everyday Korean writing, you more often encounter it inside fully composed syllables rather than as a standalone character.
Common uses
- •Linguistics and Korean text analysis using jamo-level representations
- •Creating or editing Hangul syllable components in custom text tools
- •Font and rendering tests for Korean choseong letters
- •Database indexing or search tools that handle Unicode decomposed text
- •Educational materials that demonstrate Hangul initial consonants
Examples
ᄈ Hangul Choseong Ssangpieup
- ᄈ빠
- ᄈ빠는 것
- ᄈ삐스기
- ᄈ이를 ᄈ
- ᄈHangul choseong: ᄈ
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1108 | |
| HTML Entity | ᄈ | |
| HTML Code | ᄈ | |
| CSS | \1108 |
FAQ
What does ᄈ represent in Hangul?
ᄈ is the Hangul Choseong (initial consonant) called Ssangpieup (Unicode U+1108).
How do I copy ᄈ easily for web or code?
You can copy the character directly (ᄈ) or use its HTML entity ᄈ / Unicode U+1108 in your code.
Will I usually see ᄈ by itself in normal Korean text?
Often you’ll see it as part of a composed Hangul syllable block. The standalone jamo form is mainly used in jamo-level processing or educational/linguistic contexts.
Is ᄈ the same as the Korean letter “ㅃ”?
They are related: ᄈ is the jamo (choseong) component, while “ㅃ” is the compatibility/visual consonant form. They correspond to the Ssangpieup consonant in Hangul systems.