Cuneiform Numeric Sign Nine U Character
π (U+12414) is the cuneiform numeric sign representing nine.
U+12414
π is a cuneiform numeric sign used in writing systems that included cuneiform numerals. It corresponds to the value nine and is encoded in Unicode for digital use. Below youβll find practical copy options and context for using it correctly.
Cuneiform Numeric Sign Nine U Character Meaning
π is named βCUNEIFORM NUMERIC SIGN NINE Uβ in Unicode. As a numeric sign, it is used to represent the number nine in cuneiform-based numeral writing. In practice, it may appear in texts that document quantities, lists, inventories, or other number-referencing content where cuneiform numerals are represented digitally. When you copy it into documents or designs, ensure your fonts and rendering support the character; otherwise it may appear as a missing-glyph box. This page provides the exact Unicode code point (U+12414) and common ways to insert it via HTML/CSS/JavaScript escapes.
Common uses
- β’Adding accurate cuneiform numeral characters to educational materials
- β’Labeling quantities (e.g., βnineβ) in fonts or typographic studies
- β’Using in digital humanities projects that transcribe cuneiform documents
- β’Creating poster or social media graphics that reference cuneiform numerals
- β’Developing web content that requires exact Unicode insertion for U+12414
Examples
π Cuneiform Numeric Sign Nine U
- πValue: π
- πQuantity nine: π
- πSign for 9 in cuneiform numerals: π
- πCuneiform nine (Unicode U+12414): π
- πNine in a numeral list: π
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+12414 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒐔 | |
| HTML Code | 𒐔 | |
| CSS | \12414 |
FAQ
What Unicode character is π?
π is the Unicode character βCUNEIFORM NUMERIC SIGN NINE Uβ with code point U+12414.
How do I copy π for use in HTML?
You can use the provided HTML entity: 𒐔
What does π mean?
It is a cuneiform numeric sign representing the number nine.
Why does π sometimes not display correctly?
Your font or browser may not support cuneiform characters. Try a Unicode-capable font, and verify the character renders as a glyph.