Tuesday, 06 November 2012
‌₩
Won sign
Punctuation
apostrophe ( ’ ' )
brackets ( [ ], ( ), { }, ⟨ ⟩ )
colon ( : )
comma ( , ، 、 )
dash ( , –, —, ― )
ellipsis ( …, ..., . . . )
exclamation mark ( ! )
full stop/period ( . )
guillemets ( « » )
hyphen ( )
hyphen-minus ( - )
question mark ( ? )
quotation marks ( ‘ ’, “ ”, ' ', " " )
semicolon ( ; )
slash‌/stroke‌/solidus ( /,  ⁄  )
Word dividers
space ( ) ( ) ( )
interpunct ( · )
General typography
ampersand ( & )
at sign ( @ )
asterisk ( * )
backslash ( \ )
bullet ( )
caret ( ^ )
dagger ( †, ‡ )
degree ( ° )
ditto mark ( )
inverted exclamation mark ( ¡ )
inverted question mark ( ¿ )
number sign‌/pound‌/hash ( # )
numero sign ( )
obelus ( ÷ )
ordinal indicator ( º, ª )
percent, per mil ( %, ‰, )
pilcrow ( )
prime ( ′, ″, ‴ )
section sign ( § )
tilde ( ~ )
underscore‌/understrike ( _ )
vertical bar‌/broken bar‌/pipe ( ¦, | )
Intellectual property
copyright symbol ( © )
registered trademark ( ® )
service mark ( )
sound recording copyright ( )
trademark ( )
Currency
currency (generic) ( ¤ )
currency (specific)
( ฿ ¢ $ ƒ £ ¥ )
Uncommon typography
asterism ( )
tee ( )
up tack ( )
index/fist ( )
therefore sign ( )
because sign ( )
interrobang ( )
irony punctuation ( ؟ )
lozenge ( )
reference mark ( )
tie ( )
Related
diacritical marks
whitespace characters
non-English quotation style ( « », „ ” )
In other scripts
Chinese punctuation
Wikipedia book Book  · Category Category  · Portal

The won sign (₩) is a currency symbol that represents:

And in fiction:

  • Woolong, a fictional currency in Cowboy Bebop
  • Kinzcash, a fictional form of currency in the online game Webkinz

Computing[link]

The directory separator character also appears on Korean versions of Microsoft Windows as ₩, because ₩ occupies the same position (0x5C) on code page 949 that backslash occupies in ASCII.[1]

Encoding[link]

The Unicode code point is U+20A9 won sign (HTML: ₩).

Additionally, there is also a sign at U+FFE6 fullwidth won sign (HTML: ₩ in the block Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms) for use with wide fonts, especially east Asian fonts.

U+20A9 is not merely used in South Korea. Alternatively, the backslash (U+005C \ ) is used on Microsoft Windows and the fullwidth form (U+FFE6 ) is used on Mac OS. In many South Korean fonts for Windows, the backslash has the shape of the Won sign including system fonts such Gulim (굴림) and Malgun Gothic (맑은 고딕).

References[link]

  1. ^ When is a backslash not a backslash?

http://wn.com/Won_sign

Related pages:

http://nl.wn.com/Wonteken

http://de.wn.com/₩




This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Won_sign

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