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Hangul Jongseong Tikeut-kiyeok Letter

ᇊ is the Hangul jongseong (final consonant) Tikeut-Kiyeok character used in Korean writing.

U+11CA

ᇊ is a specific Hangul jamo used as a final consonant (jongseong). It’s helpful when you need precise Korean text composition or typography. Below you’ll find copy options, Unicode details, and practical usage ideas.

Hangul Jongseong Tikeut-kiyeok Letter Meaning

ᇊ is the Unicode character named “HANGUL JONGSEONG TIKEUT-KIYEOK” with code point U+11CA. In Hangul, jongseong refers to the consonant sound placed at the end of a syllable block. This jamo represents the specific final consonant combination associated with “tikeut” (ㄷ-like consonant) followed by “kiyeok” (ㄱ-like consonant) in the final-position system. You’ll typically encounter it when working at the jamo level (not just full precomposed Hangul syllables), such as in fonts, text normalization, Korean language data processing, or rendering pipelines that require exact code points.

Common uses

  • Copying the exact Hangul jongseong character for Korean text that requires jamo-level precision
  • Testing font/glyph rendering for Hangul jamo and final-consonant typography
  • Building or debugging Korean text generation where final consonants are assembled programmatically
  • Preparing datasets or annotations that store Hangul as individual jamo code points
  • Troubleshooting display issues when a system needs the specific code point U+11CA

Examples

ᇊ Hangul Jongseong Tikeut-Kiyeok

  • U+11CA = ᇊ
  • Jongseong example: ᇊ
  • Copy this character: ᇊ
  • Test glyph rendering with ᇊ
  • Final jamo (U+11CA): ᇊ

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+11CA
HTML Entityᇊ
HTML Codeᇊ
CSS\11CA

FAQ

What does the Hangul Jongseong Tikeut-kiyeok letter mean?

ᇊ is the Unicode character named “HANGUL JONGSEONG TIKEUT-KIYEOK” with code point U+11CA. In Hangul, jongseong refers to the consonant sound placed at the end of a syllable block. This jamo represents the specific final consonant combination associated with “tikeut” (ㄷ-like consonant) followed by “kiyeok” (ㄱ-like consonant) in the final-position system. You’ll typically encounter it when working at the jamo level (not just full precomposed Hangul syllables), such as in fonts, text normalization, Korean language data processing, or rendering pipelines that require exact code points.

What is ᇊ called in Unicode?

It’s named “HANGUL JONGSEONG TIKEUT-KIYEOK”.

What is the Unicode code point for ᇊ?

The code point is U+11CA.

How do I copy ᇊ in web text?

You can copy the character directly (ᇊ) or use the HTML entity ᇊ or the CSS escape \\11CA.

Is ᇊ a complete Hangul syllable?

No. It’s a Hangul jamo used as a jongseong (final consonant) component, not a precomposed syllable.