Won sign
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
apostrophe ( ’ ' )
brackets (( )), ([ ]), ({ }), (< >)
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
dashes ( ‒, –, —, ― )
ellipses ( …, ... )
exclamation mark ( ! )
full stop (period) ( . )
guillemets ( « » )
hyphen ( -, †)
question mark ( ? )
quotation marks ( ‘ ’, “ †)
semicolon ( ; )
slash/stroke ( / )
solidus ( â„ )
spaces ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) (â )
interpunct ( · )
General typography
ampersand ( & )
at sign ( @ )
asterisk ( * )
backslash ( \ )
bullet ( • )
caret ( ^ )
daggers ( †, ‡ )
degree ( ° )
inverted exclamation mark ( ¡ )
inverted question mark ( ¿ )
number sign ( # )
numero sign ( â„– )
percent (etc.) ( %, ‰, ‱ )
pilcrow ( ¶ )
prime ( ′ )
section sign ( § )
tilde/swung dash ( ~ )
umlaut/diaeresis ( ¨ )
underscore/understrike ( _ )
vertical/pipe/broken bar ( |, ¦ )
Uncommon typography
asterism ( â‚ )
index/fist ( ☞ )
therefore sign ( ∴ )
because sign ( ∵ )
interrobang ( ‽ )
irony mark ( ⸮ )
lozenge ( â—Š )
reference mark ( ※ )
The won sign (â‚©) 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
[edit] Computing
The directory separator character also appears on Korean versions of Microsoft Windows as â‚©, because â‚© occupies the same position (0x5C) on code page 949 that backslash occupies in ASCII.[1]
[edit] Unicode
The Unicode code point for â‚© is U+20A9; it can be represented in non-unicode HTML as ₩.
Additionally, there is a full-width won sign: ₩ at code point U+FFE6 for use with wide fonts (esp. east Asian fonts).

