๐–ฟข

See also: ๐ ƒŠ [U+200CA CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-200CA], ใ†น [U+31B9 BOPOMOFO LETTER LH], L [U+004C LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L], โ„“ [U+2113 SCRIPT SMALL L], ใ„ด [U+3134 HANGUL LETTER NIEUN], ๐ ƒ‹ [U+200CB CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-200CB], and แƒ [U+10DD GEORGIAN LETTER ON]
๐–ฟข U+16FE2, 𖿢
OLD CHINESE HOOK MARK
โ† ๐–ฟก
[U+16FE1]
Ideographic Symbols and Punctuation ๐–ฟฃ โ†’
[U+16FE3]

Chinese

Alternative forms

The appearance of this letter varies widely between different texts or fonts. The most common form is as a vertical and horizontal line. It also varies which one of the lines is longer. Its standardized version in the official Unicode chart is with horizontal line longer, however that is mostly due to the fact that before itโ€™s encoding, Hangul letter ใ„ด was used, but in the original writing, it could also exist with the vertical line longer. Additionally, the bottom was usually thicker.

There also exist forms with slightly slanted vertical line, appearing similar to ๐ ƒ‹, however those are not so common.

Punctuation mark

๐–ฟข

  1. Mark, called "hook" or "tadpole" mark, or ้‰ค่ญ˜่™Ÿ๏ผ้’ฉ่ฏ†ๅท in Chinese that denotes pause or break in the text. (See usage notes)

Usage notes

The usage of the mark varies greatly between the texts. They can be used only to mark the end of a section or as frequently as to mark the end of a clause.

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