U+14D9 "ᓙ" Canadian Syllabics Y-Cree Loo Unicode Character

Unicode Version 17.0

U+14D9 "ᓙ" Canadian Syllabics Y-Cree Loo is part of the Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics block, a script system created in the 19th century by missionary James Evans to write various Indigenous languages of Canada. This specific character represents a syllable sound roughly equivalent to "lo" in the Y-dialect of Plains Cree, one of several Cree language variants distinguished by regional phonetic differences. It is encoded for use in digital text to preserve and support the written form of these languages, and its shape combines a rotated "V" with a small hook or dot to indicate the vowel and consonant pairing. Like all Canadian Syllabics characters, it follows a systematic pattern where the orientation of the symbol denotes the vowel sound that follows the consonant.

General Properties

Code Point U+14D9
Version Added 3.0
Name Canadian Syllabics Y-Cree Loo
Block Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics
General Category Other Letter
Canonical Combining Class Not Reordered
Bidirectional Class Left To Right

Encodings

HTML Decimal Encoding ᓙ
HTML Hex Encoding ᓙ
UTF-8 Encoding 0xE1 0x93 0x99
UTF-16 Encoding 0x14D9
UTF-32 Encoding 0x000014D9
C/C++/Java Escape \u14d9

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 Alphabetic
Script Canadian Aboriginal
Script Extensions Canadian Aboriginal
Indic Syllabic Category Other
ID Start Yes
XID Start Yes
ID Continue Yes
XID Continue Yes
Alphabetic Yes
Vertical Orientation Upright
Grapheme Base Yes
Grapheme Cluster Break Other
Word Break Alphabetic letter
Sentence Break OLetter