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See also: and 𰀆
U+314D, ㅍ
HANGUL LETTER PHIEUPH

[U+314C]
Hangul Compatibility Jamo
[U+314E]
U+1111, ᄑ
HANGUL CHOSEONG PHIEUPH

[U+1110]
Hangul Jamo
[U+1112]
U+11C1, ᇁ
HANGUL JONGSEONG PHIEUPH

[U+11C0]
Hangul Jamo
[U+11C2]
U+320C, ㈌
PARENTHESIZED HANGUL PHIEUPH

[U+320B]
Enclosed CJK Letters and Months
[U+320D]
U+326C, ㉬
CIRCLED HANGUL PHIEUPH

[U+326B]
Enclosed CJK Letters and Months
[U+326D]
U+FFBD, ᄑ
HALFWIDTH HANGUL LETTER PHIEUPH

[U+FFBC]
Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
[U+FFBE]

Korean

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Stroke order
 

Etymology

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The Hunmin Jeongeum Haerye, the treatise introducing the principles behind the Korean alphabet written by its inventor King Sejong in 1446, explains that this glyph was derived by adding strokes to (b) to represent aspiration.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /pʰ/
  • Actual realisation:
    (word-initially, between vowels, or after nasals and liquids) IPA(key): [pʰ]
    (before stops, or word-finally) IPA(key): [p̚]
    (before nasals) IPA(key): [m]

Letter

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(p)

  1. 피읖 (pieup, “pieup”), a jamo (letter) of hangul, the Korean alphabet: the aspirated bilabial plosive ([pʰ])

See also

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  • (aspirate plosives): (t, “t”), (k, “k”)
  • (bilabials): (b, “b”), (m, “m”)