U+B68C "뚌" Hangul Syllable Ddyols Unicode Character
U+B68C "뚌" Hangul Syllable Ddyols is a precomposed syllable in the modern Korean Hangul writing system, representing the phonetic combination of the consonants "ㄸ" (a tensed "dd" sound) and "ㅛ" (the vowel "yo") followed by the final consonant "ㄹ" (an "l" sound) to form the syllable "ddyol." It is encoded in the Hangul Syllables block of Unicode, which provides a complete set of all possible 11,172 precomposed Hangul syllable characters to support efficient text processing. While this specific syllable is highly rare in contemporary Korean vocabulary and does not appear as a common word, it is a valid and correctly formed linguistic unit within the Korean script, demonstrating the systematic and predictable composition of Hangul syllables from their component jamo characters.
General Properties
| Code Point | U+B68C |
| Version Added | 2.0 |
| Name | Hangul Syllable Ddyols |
| Block | Hangul Syllables |
| General Category | Other Letter |
| Canonical Combining Class | Not Reordered |
| Bidirectional Class | Left To Right |
| Decomposition Type | Canonical |
| Decomposition Mapping | "뚀" U+B680 Hangul Syllable Ddyo "ᆳ" U+11B3 Hangul Jongseong Rieul-Sios |
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding | 뚌 |
| HTML Hex Encoding | 뚌 |
| UTF-8 Encoding | 0xEB 0x9A 0x8C |
| UTF-16 Encoding | 0xB68C |
| UTF-32 Encoding | 0x0000B68C |
| C/C++/Java Escape | \ub68c |