Hangul Letter Yesieung Pansios

Copy and paste the hangul letter yesieung pansios symbol (U+3183) instantly. Part of the Hangul Compatibility Jamo Unicode block.

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

Character Codes

UnicodeU+3183
HTML Entityㆃ
CSS Code\3183
JavaScript\u{3183}
Decimalㆃ

About This Symbol

Name
Hangul Letter Yesieung Pansios
Code Point
U+3183

The Hangul Letter Yesieung Pansios () is a Unicode character assigned to the Hangul Compatibility Jamo block at code point U+3183. This block contains characters used across a variety of applications including technical documentation, web development, mathematical notation, and everyday digital communication. The hangul letter yesieung pansios 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 to your clipboard
  • 2.Paste it anywhere with Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac)
  • 3.Or use the HTML entity ㆃ in your code
  • 4.For CSS, use \3183 with the content property

Understanding Hangul Letter Yesieung Pansios

The hangul letter yesieung pansios character (ㆃ) was introduced in Unicode to provide a standardized way to represent this specific glyph across all platforms and devices. Encoded at position U+3183, it sits within the Hangul Compatibility Jamo range and carries a distinct semantic meaning that differentiates it from visually similar characters.

The hexadecimal value 3183 places this character at decimal position 12675 in the Unicode table. When embedding this character in source code, developers can choose between the HTML numeric reference ㆃ, the CSS escape \3183, or the JavaScript literal \u{3183}. Each method guarantees correct rendering regardless of the file encoding.

Known by its descriptive name referencing "hangul 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 Korean

Hangul stands apart from every other major writing system as a script deliberately invented by a single person with explicit design principles. Its 11,172 syllable blocks, each composed from an initial consonant, a medial vowel, and an optional final consonant, make it both scientifically systematic and visually distinctive. The jamo blocks encode these individual components, enabling both precomposed syllable rendering and decomposed linguistic analysis.

King Sejong the Great promulgated Hangul in 1443 through the Hunminjeongeum, a document whose preface declared the script was created so that common people could easily learn to read and write. Each consonant letter was designed to depict the shape of the speech organ used to produce it — a revolutionary featural principle found in no other widely used script. Despite fierce opposition from the scholarly elite who favored Chinese characters, Hangul gradually gained acceptance. The script was banned during Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945), and its survival became a point of fierce national pride. Unicode encodes the full set of 11,172 modern Hangul syllables in a contiguous block, plus jamo components in separate blocks for flexibility.

Common Uses

  • All Korean language digital communication
  • Korean language education and literacy programs
  • Linguistic research and phonological analysis
  • Korean web content and application localization
  • Optical character recognition for Korean text

Technical Notes: Hangul encoding in Unicode uses a mathematical relationship: each precomposed syllable's code point can be calculated from its constituent jamo using a formula involving the indices of initial, medial, and final components. This allows algorithmic decomposition and composition without lookup tables. The Hangul Jamo block (U+1100–U+11FF) contains conjoining jamo that combine visually, while the Hangul Compatibility Jamo block (U+3130–U+318F) contains non-conjoining forms for standalone display. The extended jamo blocks A and B support archaic Korean orthography.

Cultural Context: Hangul Day (October 9 in South Korea, January 15 in North Korea) is a national holiday celebrating the script's creation — a testament to how deeply Hangul is woven into Korean identity. Linguists worldwide regard it as one of the most rational and elegant writing systems ever devised. The featural design principle means that letters sharing phonological features also share visual features, making Hangul unusually learnable. This systematic beauty has inspired proposals for applying similar featural principles to construct writing systems for previously unwritten languages.

Related Characters from Hangul Compatibility Jamo