Hangul Syllables | |
---|---|
Range | U+AC00..U+D7AF (11,184 code points) |
Plane | BMP |
Scripts | Hangul |
Major alphabets | Hangul |
Assigned | 11,172 code points |
Unused | 12 reserved code points |
Source standards | KS C 5601-1992 |
Unicode version history | |
2.0 (1996) | 11,172 (+11,172) |
Unicode documentation | |
Code chart ∣ Web page | |
Note: [1][2] 6,656 characters were present at U+3400..U+4DFF in Unicode 1.1, but were moved to their current locations with Unicode version 2.0, along with 4,516 additional characters. |
Hangul Syllables is a Unicode block containing precomposed Hangul syllable blocks for modern Korean. The syllables can be directly mapped by algorithm to sequences of two or three characters in the Hangul Jamo Unicode block:
This block is encoded according to the canonically equivalent order of these (two or three) jamos (one in each subrange of jamos above) composing each syllable.
Note that a full Hangul syllable may include one of these characters but may be preceded by one or more leading consonant jamos, and followed by one or more trailing jamos (possibly preceded by one or more vowel jamos if the encoded syllable is composed by two jamos does not include any trailing consonant jamos). As well some Hangul syllables may not include any one of these precomposed character. But such extension of the Hangul script (which allows creating more complex syllables composed in the same square) is not very common in modern Korean.