U+11F24 "𑼤" Kawi Letter Dha Unicode Character

Unicode Version 17.0

𑼤

U+11F24 "𑼤" Kawi Letter Dha is a glyph from the Kawi script, an ancient writing system used primarily in Maritime Southeast Asia to write Old Javanese, Balinese, and Sanskrit between the 8th and 16th centuries. This specific letter represents the voiced aspirated dental stop sound "dha," as in the English word "adhere," and is part of a larger set of consonants in the Kawi abugida. The character was added to the Unicode Standard in version 14.0, released in September 2021, helping to preserve and digitally encode this historical script for scholarly and cultural purposes. Its inclusion allows digital texts to accurately represent inscriptions and manuscripts from the region's rich epigraphic tradition.

General Properties

Code Point U+11F24
Version Added 15.0
Name Kawi Letter Dha
Block Kawi
General Category Other Letter
Canonical Combining Class Not Reordered
Bidirectional Class Left To Right

Encodings

HTML Decimal Encoding 𑼤
HTML Hex Encoding 𑼤
UTF-8 Encoding 0xF0 0x91 0xBC 0xA4
UTF-16 Encoding 0xD807 0xDF24
UTF-32 Encoding 0x00011F24
C/C++/Java Escape \ud807\udf24

Unicode Properties

NFC Quick Check Yes
NFD Quick Check Yes
NFKC Quick Check Yes
NFKD Quick Check Yes
Numeric Type None
Numeric Value NaN
Line Break Aksara
Script Kawi
Script Extensions Kawi
Indic Syllabic Category Consonant
Indic Conjunct Break Consonant
ID Start Yes
XID Start Yes
ID Continue Yes
XID Continue Yes
Alphabetic Yes
Vertical Orientation Rotated
Grapheme Base Yes
Grapheme Cluster Break Other
Word Break Alphabetic letter
Sentence Break OLetter