White Circle With Lower Left Quadrant Symbol
◵ is a geometric symbol: a white circle with the lower-left quadrant emphasized.
U+25F5
◵ (U+25F5) is a geometric shape character commonly used when you want a subtle, partitioned circle. It reads as a clear visual cue without heavy symbolism. Below you’ll find copy options and practical ways to use it in text, UI, and design.
White Circle With Lower Left Quadrant Symbol Meaning
◵ is a geometric “partitioned circle” character: a white circle with the lower-left quadrant indicated. In practice, it’s often used as a minimalist marker, status indicator, or decorative glyph in places where a full circle might be too strong. Designers may use it to suggest orientation, subdivision, or an alternate “version” of a circular element (for example, a partially filled state). Because it’s purely typographic and doesn’t carry a universally fixed cultural meaning, its interpretation usually depends on your context—UI labels, icons, or decorative separators in documents and social posts.
Common uses
- •Use as a lightweight bullet or list marker in notes and documents
- •Add a subtle status/icon cue in UI text (e.g., “step 2” or “pending”)
- •Decorate separators in headings, cards, or section dividers
- •Indicate orientation or subdivision in infographics and mockups
- •Serve as a simple decorative symbol in social media captions
Examples
◵ White Circle with Lower Left Quadrant
- ◵Task ◵ Review the draft and confirm requirements
- ◵Status: ◵ In progress
- ◵Section ◵ Background and constraints
- ◵Choose option ◵ Lower-left layout
- ◵Milestone ◵ Phase 2 complete
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+25F5 | |
| HTML Entity | ◵ | |
| HTML Code | ◵ | |
| CSS | \25F5 |
FAQ
What does the White Circle With Lower Left Quadrant symbol mean?
◵ is a geometric “partitioned circle” character: a white circle with the lower-left quadrant indicated. In practice, it’s often used as a minimalist marker, status indicator, or decorative glyph in places where a full circle might be too strong. Designers may use it to suggest orientation, subdivision, or an alternate “version” of a circular element (for example, a partially filled state). Because it’s purely typographic and doesn’t carry a universally fixed cultural meaning, its interpretation usually depends on your context—UI labels, icons, or decorative separators in documents and social posts.
What is the Unicode code point for ◵?
◵ is U+25F5 (WHITE CIRCLE WITH LOWER LEFT QUADRANT).
How can I copy ◵ in HTML?
Use the HTML entity ◵ (provided as ◵ on this page).
How do I use ◵ in CSS and JavaScript?
CSS escape: \\25F5. JavaScript escape: \\u{25F5}.
Does ◵ have a fixed universal meaning?
Not really—◵ is mainly used as a geometric partitioned-circle glyph. Its meaning depends on your design context (markers, status cues, decoration, and so on).