unicode charactersunicode-characters.info
Unicode Blocks » Character Categories » Fun Characters » Faq » Contact Us »














   September 2024
  - Unicode 15.0 update.




LATIN CAPITAL LETTER TURNED M character


Name:
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER TURNED M
Hex Number:
U+019C
Decimal Number:
412
HTML Entity (Dec):
Ɯ
HTML Entity (Hex):
Ɯ
Category:
Lu (Uppercase Letter)
Bidi Class:
L (Left-to-Right)
Mirrored:
N
Combining Class:
0
Unicode Block:
Latin Extended-B
Plane:
0
Plane Code:
BMP
Plane Description:
Basic Multilingual Plane
Plane Range:
0000-FFFF
Character Preview:
Ɯ












LATIN CAPITAL LETTER TURNED M is an uppercase letter from the Basic Multilingual Plane.

The bidi class of LATIN CAPITAL LETTER TURNED M is Left-to-Right (Strong). It belongs to the strong left-to-right characters..

The Left-to-Right (L) bidi class is assigned to characters that are written from left to right. This includes most alphabetic characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and other scripts that are typically written in this direction. The presence of L characters in a text influences the overall text directionality in bidirectional contexts.

Uppercase Letter (Lu) refers to characters that are uppercase in a bicameral script. These include uppercase letters in scripts like Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and others. Uppercase letters are typically used at the beginning of sentences or proper nouns, and they are distinct from lowercase letters.

This character belongs to the Latin Extended-B block. Latin Extended-B is a block (0180-024F) of the Unicode Standard. It has been included since version 1.0, where it was only allocated to the code points U+0180..U+01FF and contained 113 characters. During unification with ISO 10646 for version 1.1, the block was expanded, and another 65 characters were added. In version 3.0, the last thirty available code points in the block were assigned..





Unicode Characters Website 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Unicode is a registered trademark of Unicode, Inc. in the United States and other countries.
This site is not in any way associated with or endorsed or sponsored by Unicode, Inc. (aka The Unicode Consortium).
For the official Unicode website, please go to www.unicode.org.