á¶ (d with hook and tail) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, used in phonetic transcription to represent a voiced retroflex implosive , though it is not explicitly part of the International Phonetic Alphabet. It is formed from d with the addition of a hook to mark it as implosive, and a tail to mark it as retroflex. It is thus a fusion of and .
was added to Unicode with version 4.1 in 2005.
There is no Unicode encoding for a capital form (, approx. <span style="position: absolute;"> ÃÂ</span>ÃÂ). However, SIL fonts such as Gentium and Charis SIL have <code>U+F20D</code> in their private-use areas as the capital form of . Alternatively, combining characters can also represent the uppercase á¶ (like ÃÂâ). There is no evidence of usage.