Cuneiform Sign Al Times Dim2 Character
π’ is the Unicode cuneiform sign βAL TIMES DIM2β (U+12022) used in transliteration and digital texts.
U+12022
π’ is a cuneiform character encoded in Unicode at U+12022. Itβs commonly used when representing cuneiform texts digitally, including in scholarly or educational contexts. Below youβll find copy options and practical ways to use it.
Cuneiform Sign Al Times Dim2 Character Meaning
π’ is the Unicode cuneiform sign named βCUNEIFORM SIGN AL TIMES DIM2β (U+12022). The name indicates a specific sign identity used in cuneiform transliteration conventions; βALβ and βDIM2β together point to a defined variant/combined notation rather than a generic pictogram. In practice, people use this character to reproduce sign lists, inscriptions, or transliterations where the exact sign form matters. When writing in digital formats (web, documents, or code), using the exact Unicode character helps avoid mismatches caused by similar-looking signs or fallback substitutions.
Common uses
- β’Copying the exact sign into a cuneiform transliteration or sign-list document
- β’Including the character in educational materials about Unicode and cuneiform writing
- β’Using the symbol in research notes or captions where a specific sign variant must be preserved
- β’Rendering cuneiform in web pages or design mockups that require precise Unicode characters
- β’Entering the character in software inputs using Unicode escapes for reliable text encoding
Examples
π’ Cuneiform Sign AL Times DIM2
- π’The sign π’ appears in line 3 of the tablet copy.
- π’Use π’ when listing variants for the AL set.
- π’In the glossary, π’ is shown alongside related signs.
- π’The digital transcription includes π’ at the specified position.
- π’I searched for U+12022 to verify the character π’.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+12022 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒀢 | |
| HTML Code | 𒀢 | |
| CSS | \12022 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Al Times Dim2 character mean?
π’ is the Unicode cuneiform sign named βCUNEIFORM SIGN AL TIMES DIM2β (U+12022). The name indicates a specific sign identity used in cuneiform transliteration conventions; βALβ and βDIM2β together point to a defined variant/combined notation rather than a generic pictogram. In practice, people use this character to reproduce sign lists, inscriptions, or transliterations where the exact sign form matters. When writing in digital formats (web, documents, or code), using the exact Unicode character helps avoid mismatches caused by similar-looking signs or fallback substitutions.
What is the Unicode code point for π’?
π’ is encoded at U+12022.
How can I copy π’ for web or documents?
You can copy the character directly (π’) or use the HTML entity: 𒀢.
What escape sequences are available for developers?
CSS escape: \\12022. JavaScript escape: \\u{12022}.
Does π’ have a descriptive meaning beyond its Unicode name?
Its most reliable identifier is the official Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN AL TIMES DIM2,β which refers to a specific cuneiform sign/variant used in transliteration contexts.