U+D5A0 "햠" Hangul Syllable Hyam Unicode Character
Unicode Version 17.0
햠
U+D5A0 "햠" Hangul Syllable Hyam is a precomposed syllable in the modern Korean Hangul writing system, formed by combining the initial consonant ㅎ (hieut), the medial vowel ㅑ (ya), and the final consonant ㅁ (mieum) to represent the sound "hyam". It belongs to the Hangul Syllables block in the Unicode standard, which encodes all possible syllabic combinations of Korean letters. This character is primarily used in written Korean for transcribing words or morphemes containing the "hyam" sound, such as in native vocabulary or loanwords, and is displayed as a single, compact glyph in digital text to support proper Korean orthography and typography.
General Properties
| Code Point | U+D5A0 |
| Version Added | 2.0 |
| Name | Hangul Syllable Hyam |
| Block | Hangul Syllables |
| General Category | Other Letter |
| Canonical Combining Class | Not Reordered |
| Bidirectional Class | Left To Right |
| Decomposition Type | Canonical |
| Decomposition Mapping | "햐" U+D590 Hangul Syllable Hya "ᆷ" U+11B7 Hangul Jongseong Mieum |
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding | 햠 |
| HTML Hex Encoding | 햠 |
| UTF-8 Encoding | 0xED 0x96 0xA0 |
| UTF-16 Encoding | 0xD5A0 |
| UTF-32 Encoding | 0x0000D5A0 |
| C/C++/Java Escape | \ud5a0 |