U+C75F "읟" Hangul Syllable Yid Unicode Character
U+C75F "읟" Hangul Syllable Yid is a precomposed syllable in the modern Hangul syllabary, representing a specific phonetic combination in the Korean language. This character is formed from the initial consonant "ㅇ" (a silent onset or the sound /ŋ/ in initial position, serving as a placeholder), the medial vowel "ㅣ" (IPA /i/), and the final consonant "ㄷ" (IPA /t/), resulting in the syllable pronounced as "yit" in Romanization. It is encoded in the Unicode Hangul Syllables block, which systematically arranges all 11,172 possible syllables of the Korean alphabet based on their consonant-vowel-final structure. While "읟" is a valid and defined character within the Unicode standard, it is considered extremely rare or obsolete in actual usage, as it does not correspond to a common word in contemporary Korean vocabulary and was likely included for completeness in representing the entire theoretical syllabary.
General Properties
| Code Point | U+C75F |
| Version Added | 2.0 |
| Name | Hangul Syllable Yid |
| Block | Hangul Syllables |
| General Category | Other Letter |
| Canonical Combining Class | Not Reordered |
| Bidirectional Class | Left To Right |
| Decomposition Type | Canonical |
| Decomposition Mapping | "의" U+C758 Hangul Syllable Yi "ᆮ" U+11AE Hangul Jongseong Tikeut |
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding | 읟 |
| HTML Hex Encoding | 읟 |
| UTF-8 Encoding | 0xEC 0x9D 0x9F |
| UTF-16 Encoding | 0xC75F |
| UTF-32 Encoding | 0x0000C75F |
| C/C++/Java Escape | \uc75f |