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D With Accent (ḋ ď ḑ đ ḍ ð) — How to Type Accented D on Any Keyboard

When people search “d with accent”, they might mean different letters.

Some are used in European languages (like ď and đ), some appear in phonetics/linguistics (like ð and ɗ), and others are used in academic writing (like , , , ).

This guide helps you:

  • Find the exact “d with accent” you need
  • Copy & paste it instantly
  • Type it on Windows, Mac, Word, Excel, Google Docs
  • Fix common issues (Alt codes not working, laptop keypad problems, etc.)

If you just need the letter right now:

  1. Copy it from this list
  2. Paste it where you want
D with Accent — Click to Copy
Tap any letter to copy it. Tooltip shows “Copied!” above the button.
Lowercase
Uppercase

Related Tool: Accent Letters Keyboard & Symbol Builder


Step 1: Pick the Exact “D with Accent” You Mean

Here are the most common ones people search for.

A) D with caron (ď Ď)

Looks like a tiny “v” above the letter.

Use cases:

  • Czech and Slovak (and some related language contexts)
  • Names and place names

Letters:

  • Lowercase: ď
  • Uppercase: Ď

B) D with stroke (đ Đ)

Looks like a bar through the d.

Use cases:

  • Croatian, Vietnamese, and other language contexts
  • Names and transliteration

Letters:

  • Lowercase: đ
  • Uppercase: Đ

C) Eth (ð Ð)

The Eth character is a different letter, not just an accent.
It’s common in language study and appears in Icelandic.

Use cases:

  • Icelandic
  • Linguistics/phonetics
  • Old English references

Letters:

  • Lowercase: ð
  • Uppercase: Ð

D) D with dot below (ḍ Ḍ)

A dot under the letter.

Use cases:

  • Sanskrit transliteration
  • Arabic transliteration
  • Academic writing / linguistics

Letters:

  • Lowercase:
  • Uppercase:

E) D with dot above (ḋ Ḋ)

A dot above the letter.

Use cases:

  • Irish (older usage/linguistic contexts)
  • Linguistics and academic writing

Letters:

  • Lowercase:
  • Uppercase:

F) Other “D with marks” you might see (less common)

  • ḑ Ḑ (d with cedilla / comma below)
  • ḏ Ḏ (d with line below)
  • ḓ Ḓ (d with circumflex below)
  • ɗ Ɗ (d with hook — common in phonetics/IPA)
  • ƌ Ƌ (d with topbar — phonetics)

If you’re unsure which one you need, the widget (click-to-copy) above is the best solution because users can visually find the right character.


How to Type “D with Accent” on Windows

Method 1: Windows Alt Codes (Fastest if you have a numeric keypad)

How to use:

  1. Turn Num Lock ON
  2. Hold Alt
  3. Type the code using the numeric keypad
  4. Release Alt

Here are the most popular ones:

D with caron (in MS Word)

  • ď → Alt 271
  • Ď → Alt 270

D with stroke (in MS Word)

  • đ → Alt 273
  • Đ → Alt 272

Eth (in Windows)

  • ð → Alt 0240
  • Ð → Alt 0208

D with dot below (in MS Word)

  • ḍ → Alt 7693
  • Ḍ → Alt 7692

D with dot above (in MS Word)

  • ḋ → Alt 7691
  • Ḋ → Alt 7690

Tip: If an Alt code works in Word but not in other apps, jump to the “Works in Word only?” section below.


Method 2: Character Map (Works in any Windows app)

This is the most reliable method if Alt codes are acting up.

Steps:

  1. Press Windows key
  2. Search Character Map
  3. Open it
  4. Tick Advanced view
  5. Search terms like:
    • “d with caron”
    • “d with stroke”
    • “eth”
    • “d with dot below”
  6. Click the letter → SelectCopy
  7. Paste anywhere

How to Type “D with Accent” on Mac

Method 1: Character Viewer (Best for all variants)

Steps:

  1. Press Control + Command + Space
  2. In the search bar, type one of these:
    • “d with caron”
    • “d with stroke”
    • “eth”
    • “d with dot below”
    • “d with dot above”
  3. Double-click the character to insert

This works in:

  • Word (Mac)
  • Google Docs
  • Pages
  • Notes
  • Most Mac apps

Method 2: Search & replace trick (fast workflow)

If you type these characters often:

  1. Copy the letter (example đ)
  2. Go to System Settings → Keyboard → Text Replacements
  3. Create a shortcut like:
    • \dbar → đ
    • \eth → ð
    • \ddot → ḍ

Now typing your shortcut replaces it automatically.


How to Type “D with Accent” in Microsoft Word

Word gives you extra power — especially on Windows.

Method 1 (Windows): Alt codes

Use the Windows Alt codes listed above (they work great in Word).

Method 2 (Windows): Type Unicode then convert (Alt + X)

This is one of the best “pro” methods in Word:

Steps:

  1. Type the Unicode value (example: 0111)
  2. Press Alt + X
  3. Word converts it into the character

Popular Unicode shortcuts in Word:

  • 010F + Alt+X → ď
  • 0110 + Alt+X → Đ
  • 0111 + Alt+X → đ
  • 00F0 + Alt+X → ð
  • 00D0 + Alt+X → Ð
  • 1E0D + Alt+X →
  • 1E0B + Alt+X →

Method 3 (Windows/Mac): Insert Symbol

Steps:

  1. Insert → Symbol → More Symbols
  2. Find the letter (try Latin Extended sets)
  3. Click Insert
  4. Optional: click Shortcut Key… to assign your own keyboard shortcut (Word Windows)

How to Type “D with Accent” in Google Docs

Method 1: Insert special characters (best)

Steps:

  1. In Google Docs, go to Insert → Special characters
  2. Search for:
    • “d with caron”
    • “d with stroke”
    • “eth”
    • “d with dot below”
  3. Click to insert

Method 2: Copy/paste (fastest)

Copy from the list at the top or the widget.


How to Type “D with Accent” in Excel

Excel can be picky with certain shortcuts, so here’s what works best:

Best options:

  • Copy/paste from the widget
  • Use Insert → Symbol (if available)
  • Use Alt codes (some work, some don’t depending on your setup)

If a code doesn’t work in Excel but works in Word, that’s normal.


Android & iPhone: Type D With Accent on Mobile

iPhone / iPad

  • Press and hold d on the keyboard
    If the exact letter isn’t shown:
  • Use copy/paste from this page (best)
  • Or use a text replacement:
    • Settings → General → Keyboard → Text Replacement

Android

  • Press and hold d (varies by keyboard)
  • If not available:
    • Copy/paste from this page
    • Or add a shortcut in your keyboard settings (Gboard supports this in personal dictionary)

“My Alt Code Isn’t Working” (Fix It)

Here are the most common reasons:

1) You’re not using the numeric keypad

Alt codes need the numpad.
Typing numbers from the top row often won’t work.

2) Num Lock is off

Turn Num Lock ON and try again.

3) You’re on a laptop without a real numpad

Options:

  • Use Character Map
  • Use Word Unicode (Alt+X) method
  • Copy/paste from the widget

4) It works in Word but not in other apps

That happens for some characters.
Best workaround:

  • Use Character Map (Windows)
  • Use copy/paste
  • Use the widget

5) The character turns into a box ▢

That’s a font issue.
Fix: change your font to something common like:

  • Calibri
  • Arial
  • Times New Roman