Hangul Syllables

The Unicode block Hangul syllable mark ( Hangul Syllables, U AC00 to U D7AF ) all syllabic signs of Hangeul has mentioned the Korean script. In South Korea, are rare except Hangul Hanja also uses called Chinese characters.

Unlike 'real' syllabic scripts, such as Japanese Kana, the Korean characters can be further in single character - called Jamo - disassemble, each designating individual sounds, and ultimately are letters. Today in Korean Jamo 51 still be used. However, these characters are not written linearly one behind the other, but the letter of a syllable are written after a relatively complex rules that each syllable is a square, and is thus similar to Chinese characters. Since quite a large font for the Korean is by the amount of located in this block finished syllabic signs needed, there is an alternative in the Unicode block Hangul Jamo and the individual letters. With their use, however, the computer must have an algorithm that assembles the individual characters correctly for syllable square.

Tables

All characters have the general category of "other letter (including syllables and ideographs )" and the Bidirectional class " left to right ". They are named according to a standard system:

Here is? ? for a particular sequence of letters. The characters and the corresponding letter sequences are divided among:

  • Unicode block Hangeul-Silbenzeichen/AC00 to BFFF
  • Unicode block Hangeul-Silbenzeichen/C000 to D7AF
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