Cuneiform Sign Dub Times She Character
𒍶 is the Unicode cuneiform sign “DUB TIMES SHE” (U+12376) for copying and digital inscriptions.
U+12376
𒍶 is a cuneiform Unicode character identified as “CUNEIFORM SIGN DUB TIMES SHE” (U+12376). Use it in research notes, epigraphy-inspired typography, or any text where you need this specific sign. This page includes copy options for web and programming workflows.
Cuneiform Sign Dub Times She Character Meaning
𒍶 (Unicode code point U+12376) is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name “CUNEIFORM SIGN DUB TIMES SHE.” In digital text, its meaning is typically handled by context—such as transliteration conventions, catalog references, or how a transcription represents the sign in a larger phrase. When you see it in a transcription, it’s usually one component of a written sequence rather than a standalone “word” in modern languages. For accurate usage, copy the exact character (not a similar one) and pair it with your source’s transliteration or labeling scheme.
Common uses
- •Copying the exact cuneiform sign into transliteration notes or academic drafts
- •Adding the character to web pages, documentation, or UI mockups that require U+12376
- •Labeling images, plates, or museum/catalog entries in digital publishing
- •Including the sign in epigraphy-inspired artwork or typographic experiments
- •Searching datasets or text corpora that store Unicode cuneiform characters by code point
Examples
𒍶 Cuneiform Sign Dub Times She
- 𒍶Plate reference: 𒍶, sign list entry
- 𒍶Transliteration line: ... 𒍶 ...
- 𒍶Dataset token sequence: 𒍶 𒍶 𒍶
- 𒍶Typography test: 𒍶 — cuneiform sign display
- 𒍶Metadata note: U+12376 = 𒍶
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+12376 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒍶 | |
| HTML Code | 𒍶 | |
| CSS | \12376 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Dub Times She character mean?
𒍶 (Unicode code point U+12376) is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name “CUNEIFORM SIGN DUB TIMES SHE.” In digital text, its meaning is typically handled by context—such as transliteration conventions, catalog references, or how a transcription represents the sign in a larger phrase. When you see it in a transcription, it’s usually one component of a written sequence rather than a standalone “word” in modern languages. For accurate usage, copy the exact character (not a similar one) and pair it with your source’s transliteration or labeling scheme.
What is the Unicode code point for 𒍶?
𒍶 is U+12376.
How can I copy 𒍶 for HTML?
You can use the HTML entity 𒍶.
How do I represent 𒍶 in JavaScript?
Use \\u{12376} in JavaScript string/escape notation.
Why should I copy the exact character instead of a similar one?
Unicode has distinct code points; copying the exact 𒍶 (U+12376) ensures your text matches the intended sign in searches, datasets, and typography.