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π’‚Ž

Cuneiform Sign E2 Times A Plus Ha Plus Da Character

π’‚Ž is a cuneiform sign identified as β€œE2 times A plus HA plus DA” (U+1208E).

U+1208E

π’‚Ž (U+1208E) is a cuneiform character commonly referenced by its standardized sign name. Use it in digital documents, design mockups, or developer text rendering. This page provides copy-ready variants and practical usage formats.

Cuneiform Sign E2 Times A Plus Ha Plus Da Character Meaning

π’‚Ž is a cuneiform sign labeled β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN E2 TIMES A PLUS HA PLUS DA” in Unicode (U+1208E). In practice, its β€œmeaning” is primarily reference-oriented: it represents a specific standardized sign used in cuneiform transcription and scholarly cataloging. When you use it in text, you’re typically matching a particular sign identity rather than conveying a universally recognized standalone word or emoji-like concept. If you’re creating transliterations, fonts, or educational materials, using the exact Unicode character helps ensure consistency across systems that support the glyph.

Common uses

  • β€’Typing a specific cuneiform sign in Unicode-enabled documents or notes
  • β€’Including the character in linguistic/transliteration datasets and annotations
  • β€’Using it in web or app UI text that displays cuneiform with the correct code point
  • β€’Building font/glyph tests or Unicode coverage checks for cuneiform support
  • β€’Designing posters, cards, or educational slides that reference specific signs

Examples

π’‚Ž Cuneiform Sign E2 Times A Plus HA Plus DA

  • π’‚ŽU+1208E: π’‚Ž
  • π’‚ŽCuneiform sign: π’‚Ž (E2 Γ— A + HA + DA).
  • π’‚ŽTransliteration uses the exact Unicode character π’‚Ž.
  • π’‚ŽGlyph test string: π’‚Žπ’‚Žπ’‚Ž
  • π’‚ŽPaste the sign π’‚Ž into your document to match the specified code point.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1208E
HTML Entity𒂎
HTML Code𒂎
CSS\1208E

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign E2 Times A Plus Ha Plus Da character mean?

π’‚Ž is a cuneiform sign labeled β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN E2 TIMES A PLUS HA PLUS DA” in Unicode (U+1208E). In practice, its β€œmeaning” is primarily reference-oriented: it represents a specific standardized sign used in cuneiform transcription and scholarly cataloging. When you use it in text, you’re typically matching a particular sign identity rather than conveying a universally recognized standalone word or emoji-like concept. If you’re creating transliterations, fonts, or educational materials, using the exact Unicode character helps ensure consistency across systems that support the glyph.

What is the Unicode code point for π’‚Ž?

π’‚Ž is U+1208E.

How can I copy π’‚Ž into HTML?

Use the HTML entity: 𒂎 (or 𒂎).

How do I use π’‚Ž in JavaScript?

You can use the escape form \\u{1208E}.

Why does π’‚Ž sometimes show as a box?

Your device or browser may not have a font that supports this cuneiform glyph, even if Unicode is correct.