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π’‚Ά

Cuneiform Sign Ga Gunu Character

π’‚Ά is the cuneiform sign GA GUNU (U+120B6), useful for research, typography, and historical text projects.

U+120B6

π’‚Ά is a cuneiform character used in writing systems that appear in ancient Mesopotamia. This page helps you copy it reliably in design and development workflows. You’ll also find common copy formats and practical use ideas.

Cuneiform Sign Ga Gunu Character Meaning

π’‚Ά is encoded as the cuneiform sign β€œGA GUNU” (Unicode name: CUNEIFORM SIGN GA GUNU) at U+120B6. As a cuneiform sign, it is typically used to represent a specific graphic character within cuneiform texts or sign lists rather than acting like a modern mathematical or emoji-style symbol. People encounter it in epigraphy references, font and Unicode testing, and projects that typeset or annotate cuneiform materials. When using it digitally, the main practical consideration is consistent rendering: make sure the selected font supports this code point.

Common uses

  • β€’Typing or pasting cuneiform characters in digital editions and annotations
  • β€’Building sign lists for research, teaching, or museum-style labels
  • β€’Testing Unicode and font support for the U+120B6 code point
  • β€’Creating typographic mockups or UI elements that include cuneiform text
  • β€’Preparing social posts or educational content about cuneiform writing

Examples

π’‚Ά Cuneiform Sign GA GUNU

  • π’‚Άβ€œU+120B6 shows π’‚Ά as CUNEIFORM SIGN GA GUNU.”
  • π’‚Άβ€œHere is the cuneiform sign: π’‚Ά.”
  • π’‚Άβ€œFont test string: π’‚Ά π’‚Ά π’‚Ά.”
  • π’‚Άβ€œIn the sign list, GA GUNU is written as π’‚Ά.”
  • π’‚Άβ€œAdd π’‚Ά to your cuneiform annotation.”

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+120B6
HTML Entity𒂶
HTML Code𒂶
CSS\120B6

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Ga Gunu character mean?

π’‚Ά is encoded as the cuneiform sign β€œGA GUNU” (Unicode name: CUNEIFORM SIGN GA GUNU) at U+120B6. As a cuneiform sign, it is typically used to represent a specific graphic character within cuneiform texts or sign lists rather than acting like a modern mathematical or emoji-style symbol. People encounter it in epigraphy references, font and Unicode testing, and projects that typeset or annotate cuneiform materials. When using it digitally, the main practical consideration is consistent rendering: make sure the selected font supports this code point.

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

The Unicode code point for π’‚Ά is U+120B6.

How can I copy π’‚Ά using an HTML entity?

Use the HTML entity 𒂶 to represent π’‚Ά.

What CSS escape can I use for π’‚Ά?

In CSS, you can use the escape \\120B6.

Does π’‚Ά require a specific font to display correctly?

It depends on your system. For reliable display, use a font that supports the Unicode code point U+120B6.

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