Cuneiform Numeric Sign Elamite Forty Character
π§ is the cuneiform numeric sign for Elamite forty (Unicode U+12467).
U+12467
The symbol π§ is a cuneiform numeric sign from the Elamite writing tradition. It is encoded in Unicode as U+12467, making it easy to copy and use in text, design, and code. This page helps you paste it reliably across platforms.
Cuneiform Numeric Sign Elamite Forty Character Meaning
π§ is the Unicode character named βCUNEIFORM NUMERIC SIGN ELAMITE FORTYβ (U+12467). As a numeric sign, it is primarily used to represent the value forty in contexts that use Elamite cuneiform numeric notation. Like many cuneiform signs, it may appear in historical reconstructions, scholarly transcriptions, educational materials, or font/specimen previews. When using it in modern text, itβs most helpful as a direct numeric glyph rather than a general-purpose decorative symbol. Be mindful that rendering depends on whether the active font supports this cuneiform range.
Common uses
- β’Academic notes and citations that reference Elamite numeric notation
- β’Digital epigraphy projects and transcription drafts
- β’Educational content for numerals in cuneiform writing systems
- β’Design mockups or typographic specimens testing U+12467 support
- β’Metadata labels or identifiers where a numeric sign is needed visually
Examples
π§ Cuneiform Numeric Sign Elamite Forty
- π§U+12467 corresponds to π§.
- π§In this table, forty is shown as π§.
- π§Use π§ when writing the Elamite numeric value 40.
- π§Font preview: π§ should appear in Unicode-capable cuneiform fonts.
- π§Transcription: the numeral forty is represented by π§.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+12467 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒑧 | |
| HTML Code | 𒑧 | |
| CSS | \12467 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Numeric Sign Elamite Forty character mean?
π§ is the Unicode character named βCUNEIFORM NUMERIC SIGN ELAMITE FORTYβ (U+12467). As a numeric sign, it is primarily used to represent the value forty in contexts that use Elamite cuneiform numeric notation. Like many cuneiform signs, it may appear in historical reconstructions, scholarly transcriptions, educational materials, or font/specimen previews. When using it in modern text, itβs most helpful as a direct numeric glyph rather than a general-purpose decorative symbol. Be mindful that rendering depends on whether the active font supports this cuneiform range.
What Unicode character is π§?
π§ is βCUNEIFORM NUMERIC SIGN ELAMITE FORTYβ with Unicode codepoint U+12467.
How can I copy π§ into my HTML?
Use the provided entity: 𒑧 (corresponding to U+12467).
What CSS escape can I use for π§?
You can use the CSS escape \\12467 to represent the character by codepoint.
Will π§ display correctly on all devices?
It depends on font support for this cuneiform block. If a font doesnβt include U+12467, it may show as a blank box or fallback glyph.