Upside Down



A translator to convert your normal text into upside down text.

How to make upside-down text

Define upside down. Upside down synonyms, upside down pronunciation, upside down translation, English dictionary definition of upside down. So that the upper or right side is down: turned upside down. In great disorder. Being or holding an asset that is worth less than its purchase. Upside down definition is - in such a way that the upper and the lower parts are reversed in position. How to use upside down in a sentence. Upside Down Text, just as the name suggests, is the flipped version of the text in an upside-down style. Different online tools are able to achieve this with the help of Unicode characters. 'Upside-Down' was apparently panned by critics and ignored by viewers, criticized for its abstract, physics-related concepts of physical gravity, looking for scientific exactness rather than just accepting that the setting is a small part of the film.

Upside down exclamation point

You might have seen someone commenting on a blog or video with a unusual upside down font, and now you've come looking to see how it's done. Well, look no further, because they very likely copied and pasted upside down text from a translator just like this.

The way this translator works is very simple: Unicode is a set of standardised symbols which includes hundreds of thousands of different symbols. Most modern web browsers have implemented a large number of these so you can view them on webpages (when you can't, a generic hollow square usually appears in its place). So, within unicode there just so happen to be a set of symbols which roughly correspond to upside down versions of normal text symbols. So this app simply converts each normal text symbol to its roughly-equivalent upside down unicode character.

Upside Down Christmas Tree

You might notice that a few of the upside down letters aren't actually upside down at all. For example, when you try to convert the '@' character, it stays the same. That's simply because there isn't a flipped equivalent of the '@' character. Unicode didn't intentionally create a set of upside down symols for each normal character - all of the flipped characters have just occurred by coincidence. For example, the upside down question mark: '¿' was created for languages like Spanish, which use that symbol in their normal sentences.

Copy and paste

You should be able to copy and paste the upside down letters to most social media sites including blogs and the like. Any place that supports unicode characters will generally support all of them. You may only have trouble when trying to use the mirrored letters and characters for email addresses, URLs and that sort of thing.

Upside-down characters

There are several lists of upside down characters around the internet. The wikipedia section on upside-down text contains a fairly complete table of all the characters. Below is the full lower-case upside down alphabet for you to individually cut and paste:

Upside Down Christmas Tree

z ʎ x ʍ ʌ n ʇ s ɹ b d o u ɯ l ʞ ɾ ı ɥ ɓ ɟ ǝ p ɔ q ɐ


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Upside Down

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