ϳ

Greek Letter Yot

Copy and paste the greek letter yot symbol ϳ (U+03F3) instantly. Part of the Greek and Coptic Unicode block.

Works everywhere: websites, documents, social media, code editors

Character Codes

UnicodeU+03F3
HTML Entityϳ
CSS Code\03F3
JavaScript\u{03F3}
Decimalϳ

About This Symbol

Name
Greek Letter Yot
Unicode Block
Greek and Coptic
Code Point
U+03F3

The Greek Letter Yot (ϳ) is a Unicode character assigned to the Greek and Coptic block at code point U+03F3. This block contains characters used across a variety of applications including technical documentation, web development, mathematical notation, and everyday digital communication. The greek letter yot symbol can be inserted directly into text or referenced through its HTML entity, CSS code, or JavaScript escape sequence for use in websites and applications.

How to Use

  • 1.Click "Copy Symbol" above to copy ϳ to your clipboard
  • 2.Paste it anywhere with Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac)
  • 3.Or use the HTML entity ϳ in your code
  • 4.For CSS, use \03F3 with the content property

Understanding Greek Letter Yot

Assigned to code point U+03F3, the greek letter yot (ϳ) serves a precise role within the Greek and Coptic block. Unlike generic approximations, this dedicated Unicode entry ensures that software can distinguish it from other characters and render it with consistent intent across browsers, operating systems, and fonts.

The hexadecimal value 03F3 places this character at decimal position 1011 in the Unicode table. When embedding this character in source code, developers can choose between the HTML numeric reference ϳ, the CSS escape \03F3, or the JavaScript literal \u{03F3}. Each method guarantees correct rendering regardless of the file encoding.

Known by its descriptive name referencing "greek letter," this character serves a specific role that generic symbols cannot fill. It appears in specialized typography, technical standards, and digital content where precision in symbol choice directly affects meaning or layout.

About Greek & Coptic

Greek holds a singular position in the Unicode standard: it is simultaneously a living script for the modern Greek language and an indispensable technical notation system permeating mathematics, physics, engineering, and fraternity naming conventions. Alpha through omega appear in equations worldwide, often with meanings entirely detached from their Greek linguistic origins. The extended block preserves polytonic accents used in classical and medieval Greek texts, enabling scholars to digitize the full breadth of Hellenic literature.

The Greek alphabet, emerging around 800 BCE, was the first script to systematically represent vowels as full letters rather than optional marks, a revolutionary innovation inherited from Phoenician consonantal writing. This vowel-consonant structure proved so effective that it became the template for Latin, Cyrillic, and Armenian scripts. Classical Greek developed a complex system of accents and breathing marks (polytonic orthography) that was simplified to monotonic in 1982 for modern usage. Coptic, the final stage of the Egyptian language written in a Greek-derived script, shares Unicode block space because of their deep historical connection. The Greek Extended block, encoding polytonic forms, was essential for digitizing the vast corpus of ancient Greek literature.

Common Uses

  • Modern Greek language text and communication
  • Mathematical and scientific variable naming conventions
  • Physics notation for constants and quantities
  • Greek fraternity and sorority designations
  • Classical scholarship and ancient text digitization

Technical Notes: Greek characters in mathematical contexts are semantically distinct from Greek language characters, leading to the separate Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block containing styled Greek letters. The Greek Extended block (U+1F00–U+1FFF) encodes precomposed polytonic characters — letters with combinations of accents, breathing marks, and iota subscripts. Modern Greek text processing uses the simpler monotonic subset. Coptic was originally unified with Greek in Unicode but later received its own block (U+2C80–U+2CFF) for characters unique to the Coptic script.

Cultural Context: Greek letters pervade Western intellectual tradition far beyond their linguistic function. Pi, sigma, delta, and lambda have become universal symbols in their own right — pi for the circle constant, sigma for summation, delta for change, lambda for wavelength and functional programming. This dual identity means that Greek characters carry different cultural weight depending on context: a classicist sees language, a physicist sees formulas, and a college student sees fraternity houses. Few scripts serve such varied masters simultaneously.

Related Characters from Greek and Coptic