Upside Down Alphabet Chart

The Upside Down Unicode alphabet uses letter-like symbols to mimic upside-down Latin letters. It includes uppercase and lowercase forms.

ɐ
A
q
B
ɔ
C
p
D
ǝ
E
ɟ
F
ƃ
G
ɥ
H
ı̣
I
ɾ̣
J
ʞ
K
ן
L
ɯ
M
u
N
o
O
d
P
b
Q
ɹ
R
s
S
ʇ
T
n
U
ʌ
V
ʍ
W
x
X
ʎ
Y
z
Z

Downloads

A4-ready downloads for printing and offline use.

A
B
Ɔ
C
D
Ǝ
E
F
G
H
H
I
I
ſ
J
K
L
W
M
N
N
O
O
Ԁ
P
Q
R
S
S
T
U
V
M
W
X
X
Y
Z
Z

Downloads

A4-ready downloads for printing and offline use.

Understanding Upside Down Letters

The Upside Down alphabet on this page is a decorative Unicode style. It is not a separate language. It is a different way of displaying Latin A–Z using letter-like symbols that look flipped or inverted.

Because it is a style, the most important skill is readability. Some characters can look similar, especially in lowercase, so a clean chart helps you choose the right form.

Use this chart for playful text, headings, and design mockups where you want an upside-down look without creating an image.

Reading Upside Down Characters

Read these characters as stylized Latin letters. Your brain can adapt quickly if you practice with short words first.

If a character looks confusing, compare it directly to the chart and avoid guessing. Small shape differences matter in stylized sets.

Practice reading short word patterns until you can recognize the most common letters instantly.

How to Use Upside Down Unicode

These are Unicode characters, so you can copy and paste them into many apps that support Unicode text. Results can vary based on font support and platform.

For best readability, use this style for short phrases rather than long paragraphs. Stylized letters are harder to scan in large blocks of text.

If a platform does not render correctly, switch to the image/PDF downloads for consistent display.

Use the worksheet if you want to hand-practice the shapes, but remember this set is primarily for digital decorative text.

Learning Tips for Upside Down Style

Start with uppercase first. Uppercase forms are often easier to tell apart in stylized alphabets.

Practice common words you actually type. Familiar words help you learn the shapes faster.

Keep spacing generous. Stylized letters look cleaner and read better when they are not cramped.

Practice Upside Down With Downloads

Use the PDF as a printable reference, the image for quick lookups, and the worksheet for drills. A clean chart nearby helps you avoid mixing look-alike characters.

Pick a small set of letters today and practice reading and typing them. This style becomes easier once the common shapes feel familiar.