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Hangul Jongseong Ssangrieul Letter

ᇐ (U+11D0) is the Hangul jongseong ssangrieul letter used as a Korean final consonant.

U+11D0

ᇐ is a Hangul compatibility letter representing a specific jongseong (final consonant) sound in Korean. It’s mainly used when constructing or displaying Hangul syllables that require this particular final consonant. This page helps you copy the character reliably and understand where it fits in Korean writing.

Hangul Jongseong Ssangrieul Letter Meaning

Hangul jongseong ssangrieul (ᇐ, U+11D0) is a Korean consonant element used as a final sound (jongseong) in syllable blocks. In Hangul, the “jongseong” positions determine what consonant closes a syllable. “Ssangrieul” refers to a doubled-rieul–related form, used to encode the correct final consonant behavior in Hangul syllable composition. In practice, you’ll encounter ᇐ when working with Unicode Hangul components, text rendering, legacy/compatibility forms, or niche typography tasks where individual jamo characters are shown or manipulated.

Common uses

  • Copying the exact character ᇐ when composing Hangul jamo sequences
  • Displaying Hangul components in educational content about Korean phonetics
  • Using the character in UI/typography previews for Hangul syllable construction
  • Tagging or annotating text samples that specifically include this jongseong
  • Developer use in Unicode tests, fonts, or rendering regression checks

Examples

ᇐ Hangul Jongseong Ssangrieul Symbol

  • Hangul jongseong: ᇐ
  • Final consonant symbol ᇐ in Unicode
  • Unicode test character: ᇐ (U+11D0)
  • ᇐ included in jamo sequence examples

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+11D0
HTML Entityᇐ
HTML Codeᇐ
CSS\11D0

FAQ

What does the Hangul Jongseong Ssangrieul letter mean?

Hangul jongseong ssangrieul (ᇐ, U+11D0) is a Korean consonant element used as a final sound (jongseong) in syllable blocks. In Hangul, the “jongseong” positions determine what consonant closes a syllable. “Ssangrieul” refers to a doubled-rieul–related form, used to encode the correct final consonant behavior in Hangul syllable composition. In practice, you’ll encounter ᇐ when working with Unicode Hangul components, text rendering, legacy/compatibility forms, or niche typography tasks where individual jamo characters are shown or manipulated.

What character is ᇐ?

ᇐ is “HANGUL JONGSEONG SSANGRIEUL” with Unicode codepoint U+11D0.

Is ᇐ a full Korean syllable?

No. It is a Hangul jamo component (a jongseong/final consonant element), not a complete precomposed syllable by itself.

How can I copy ᇐ reliably?

Use the direct character (ᇐ) or copy via the provided encodings like ᇐ or the escapes (\\11D0, \\u{11D0}) depending on your environment.

Where would I typically see this character in real text?

You’ll most often see it in developer work (Unicode/font/rendering tests), typography demonstrations, or educational materials that reference individual Hangul components.