HTML Entity for Lowercase U Latin (ͧ)

What You'll Learn
How to display the combining Latin small letter u (ͧ) in HTML using hexadecimal, decimal, and CSS escape methods. This character (U+0367) is a nonspacing combining mark from the Combining Diacritical Marks block. It appears as a small superscript “u” above a base character—for example, nͧ shows a small u above the letter n.
Render it with ͧ, ͧ, or CSS escape \367. There is no named HTML entity. As a combining character, it must follow a base character for correct rendering.
⚡ Quick Reference — Lowercase U Latin Entity
U+0367Combining Diacritical Marks
ͧHexadecimal reference
ͧDecimal reference
—No named entity
Name Value
──────────── ──────────
Unicode U+0367
Hex code ͧ
HTML code ͧ
Named entity (none)
CSS code \367
Meaning Combining Latin small letter u
Type Combining mark (nonspacing, Mn)
Block Combining Diacritical Marks (U+0300–U+036F)Complete HTML Example
A simple example showing the combining Latin small letter u (ͧ) using hexadecimal code, decimal HTML code, and a CSS content escape. The combining example shows it after a base letter:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
#point:after{
content: "\367";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p>Symbol (hex): ͧ</p>
<p>Symbol (decimal): ͧ</p>
<p id="point">Symbol (CSS): </p>
<p>Combining: nͧ</p>
</body>
</html>🌐 Browser Support
The combining Latin small letter u (ͧ) renders correctly in modern browsers when UTF-8 is used:
👀 Live Preview
See the combining Latin small letter u (ͧ) and how it combines with a base character:
🧠 How It Works
Hexadecimal Code
ͧ uses the Unicode hexadecimal value 367 to display the character. Place it immediately after a base character so it renders above it.
Decimal HTML Code
ͧ uses the decimal Unicode value 871 to display the same character. A common method for combining characters.
CSS Entity
\367 is used in CSS stylesheets, particularly in the content property of pseudo-elements like ::before and ::after.
Combining mark behavior
All three methods produce ͧ. Unicode U+0367 is a nonspacing combining character (Mn) in the Combining Diacritical Marks block. Place it immediately after a base letter (e.g. nͧ) so it combines correctly. There is no named HTML entity.
Use Cases
The combining Latin small letter u (ͧ) is commonly used in:
Superscript or abbreviated letter “u” in medieval Latin script and palaeographic transcriptions.
Phonetic or phonological notation where a small u is placed above a base letter.
Academic papers, critical editions, and language documentation using combining characters.
Font specimens showcasing Combining Diacritical Marks (U+0300–U+036F) support.
Unicode normalization (NFC/NFD) and text processing of combining sequences.
Testing support of combining characters and correct rendering order.
Transliteration or annotation systems using ͧ to modify a base character.
💡 Best Practices
Do
- Use
ͧorͧin HTML (no named entity exists) - Place ͧ immediately after the base character for correct combining
- Serve pages as UTF-8 for combining character support
- Use fonts that support Combining Diacritical Marks (U+0300–U+036F)
- Distinguish ͧ (combining mark) from plain
u(U+0075)
Don’t
- Assume a named entity exists—there is none for ͧ
- Use plain
uwhen a combining mark is required - Use the old incorrect CSS escape
\00367—the correct value is\367 - Put CSS escape
\367in HTML text nodes - Separate the combining mark from its base character with spaces or tags
Key Takeaways
Three references render ͧ (no named entity)
ͧ ͧFor CSS stylesheets, use the escape in the content property
\367Unicode U+0367 — COMBINING LATIN SMALL LETTER U
Combining mark: place after base character (e.g. nͧ)
Previous: Lowercase U Inverted Breve (ȗ) Next: Lowercase U Macron
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
ͧ (hex), ͧ (decimal), or \367 in CSS content. There is no named HTML entity. Place it after a base character (e.g. nͧ) for correct positioning.U+0367 (COMBINING LATIN SMALL LETTER U). Combining Diacritical Marks block. Hex 367, decimal 871.nͧ) for correct display.ͧ or ͧ in HTML, or \367 in CSS.Explore More HTML Entities!
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