O mark

O mark is the name of the circle symbol "◯". It is often used in East Asia to express affirmation. Its use is similar to that of the checkmark ("✓") in the Western world. Its opposite is the X mark ("✗" or "×").

The symbol has a variety of names and meanings in various cultures. In Japanese it is called marujirushi (丸印) or maru () and expresses affirmation. In Korean it is called gongpyo (공표; 空標; lit. ball mark) and expresses affirmation.

Regional uses

Japan

Japan interprets the symbol as an affirmation.

It also employs a number of related symbols (◎ ○ △ ×) in a system that expresses degrees of affirmation. A bullseye "◎" (nijūmaru; 二重丸) is often used for "excellent", the circle is a plain affirmation, the triangle "△" (sankaku; 三角) means "so-so" or "partially applicable", and the "×" expresses disagreement. This system is widely known in Japan, and thus often used without explanation. Sometimes ad-hoc adjustments are made to the system, but these are usually explained.

The hanamaru (花丸, 'flower O mark') is a variant of the O mark. It is typically drawn as a spiral surrounded by rounded flower petals, suggesting a flower. It is frequently used in praising or complimenting children, and the motif often appears in children's characters and logos. The hanamaru is frequently written on tests if a student has achieved full marks or an otherwise outstanding result. It is sometimes used in place of an O mark in grading written response problems if a student's answer is especially good. Some teachers will add more rotations to the spiral the better the answer is.

Unicode

Unicode provides various related symbols, including:

SymbolUnicode code point (hex)Name
U+25CBWHITE CIRCLE
U+25CEBULLSEYE
U+25CFBLACK CIRCLE
U+25EFLARGE CIRCLE
U+2B55HEAVY LARGE CIRCLE
🙆U+1F646FACE WITH OK GESTURE

U+2B55 HEAVY LARGE CIRCLE has both text and emoji presentations, as shown in the table. It defaults to emoji presentation.

The emoji U+1F4AE 💮 WHITE FLOWER looks similar to hanamaru, although it represents a rubber stamp commonly used to grade students' written answers and is not usually recognized as hanamaru.

See also

References

  1. "The Japanese Side of the PlayStation Button Confusion". Kotaku. 2012-02-10. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
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