How to type č for Writers
Writers run into c with caron (č) (č) constantly — in citations, foreign names, mathematical notes or social posts. The fastest path is to copy the character below; further down you'll find the system shortcut, HTML entity and Unicode codepoint, plus tips that fit how Writers actually work.
Copy č for Writers
Why Writers use this page
Bring authentic foreign-language quotes, characters and place names into your novel, blog or article without losing momentum.
- Get curly quotes (“ ”) and em-dashes (—) right the first time.
- Mix scripts inside the same paragraph in Scrivener, Ulysses or Google Docs.
- Compose tweets and posts that look native to your target audience.
- Embed sourced quotations with the original spelling, not transliterated guesses.
Tip for Writers
Open this page in a side window and keep your writing app on the main screen — copy-paste flow stays under a second.
HTML entity
č
č
Unicode codepoint
U+010D
Frequently asked questions
Why do Writers need a quick way to type č?
c with caron (č) (č) shows up across the texts Writers produce daily, and rebuilding the keyboard layout for a single character isn't worth the friction.
Will č survive copy-paste into Word, Docs and email?
Yes. The character is stored as Unicode, so Writers can paste it into Word, Google Docs, Outlook, Gmail, Notion or any modern editor without corruption.
What if my font shows č as a box?
The font lacks the glyph. Writers can switch to a Unicode-complete font such as Noto Sans, Arial Unicode MS or Segoe UI and the symbol will render correctly.
Can I bookmark this page and reuse it?
Absolutely. Many Writers bookmark this page and copy č again whenever they need it — no install, no login, no tracking.