Rotated letter


In the days of printing with metal type sorts, it was common to rotate letters and digits 180° to create new symbols. This was a cheap way to extend the alphabet that didn't require purchasing or cutting custom sorts. The method was used for example with the Palaeotype alphabet, the International Phonetic Alphabet, the Fraser script, and for some mathematical symbols. Perhaps the earliest instance of this that is still in use is turned e for schwa.
In the eighteenth-century Caslon metal fonts, the British pound sign was set with a rotated swash uppercase J.

Unicode support

The following rotated letters have Unicode codepoints unless otherwise indicated.

Latin

In this table, parentheses mark letters that stand in for themselves or for another. For instance, a rotated 'b' would be a 'q', and indeed some physical typefaces didn't bother with distinct sorts for lowercase b and q, d and p, or n and u; while a rotated 's' or 'z' would be itself. Long s with a combining dot below,, can stand in for a rotated j.
.
The Fraser script creates a number of duplicates of the rotated capitals.
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Rotated minusculeɐ·ɒɔə·ǝɟᵷ·ɓɥʞɯɹʇʌʍʎ
Rotated small cap?ɾ?
Rotated capitalƆƎ⅁*ԀՈɅꟚ·⅄
Fraser script?

*The Unicode character ⅁ is specified as sans-serif, as are ⅂ and ⅄.
Other rotated letters include the digraphs ᴂ and ᴔ. The "rotated" capital Q in Unicode is only turned 90 degrees: ℺.
Additional small cap forms are found in the literature, but are not supported as of Unicode 17.

Greek and Cyrillic

Many of the few rotated Greek letters are intended for mathematical notation. In this table, an en dash is used to mark Greek and Cyrillic letters that are not distinct from a Latin letter. Reversed L,, can stand in for a rotated gamma Γ, though Unicode defines it as sans serif.
ΑΒΓΔΕΖΗΘΙΚΛΜΝΞΟΠΡΣΤΥΦΧΨΩ
Rotated minuscule*ƍᴈ·϶*
Rotated capital⨿*

АБВГДЕЖЗИЙКЛМНОПРСТУФХЦЧШЩЪЫЬЭЮЯ
Rotated minuscule*әɛи̯ԁєʁ
Rotated capitalƐИ̯⨿ԀҺЄ

is close to the turned form of one variant of lower-case Б.
In some fonts, an allograph of Ʒ displays as turned Σ.
In addition, the turned Latin alpha and horseshoe of the IPA have allographs that are a turned small-capital Α and Ω.

Other

Other rotated symbols include ɞ, ʖ , ɺ, the digits and , the insular g: Ꝿ , and the ampersand .
The turned comma or inverted comma is, as its name suggests, a rotated comma. This symbol is most commonly encountered as an opening single quotation mark. It is also used for the Hawaiian letter ‘okina. In some older British texts, it was used as a superscript to abbreviate for the Scottish name element Mac/Mc, also written as Mac/Mc, thus yielding, as in .
Spanish uses the rotated punctuation marks and .

Reversed letters

In addition to turned letters, Unicode supports a few reversed letters such as ɘ, Ƨ ƨ, Ƹ ƹ, ʕ, ᴎ, ᴙ, ꟻ, ⅃ and ꟼ; Cyrillic Ԑ ԑ and Ꙡ ꙡ, superscript ᶟ ᴻ, and the tresillo Ꜫ ꜫ, which historically is a reversed three.
Current IPA ɜ is officially a reversed rather than rotated ɛ; the older rotated ᴈ is now deprecated.
Ƌ is close to a reversed Cyrillic Б.
Reversed k ɡ ŋ were added to the extIPA in 2015.