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𒃉

Cuneiform Sign Ga2 Times En Character

𒃉 is the cuneiform sign GA2 TIMES EN (U+120C9) used in digital cuneiform text and transcription.

U+120C9

𒃉 (U+120C9) is a cuneiform character identified as the sign GA2 TIMES EN. It’s helpful when you’re transcribing tablets, creating reference text, or labeling materials that use cuneiform Unicode characters. On this page you can copy the symbol and find the correct codepoint and escapes.

Cuneiform Sign Ga2 Times En Character Meaning

β€œπ’ƒ‰β€ is the Unicode character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GA2 TIMES EN” (U+120C9). The name indicates it belongs to the cuneiform writing system and is associated with a sign combination or naming convention using β€œGA2” and β€œEN” connected with β€œtimes.” In practice, this means it’s used as a distinct character in Unicode-based cuneiform texts, sign lists, or scholarly transcription workflows where specific sign identities matter. If you’re building documents, fonts, or studies that rely on exact character matching, you should use this exact codepoint rather than a visually similar symbol.

Common uses

  • β€’Copying the exact cuneiform character into Unicode cuneiform transcription documents
  • β€’Creating sign lists or typographic specimens for cuneiform character sets
  • β€’Labeling figures, captions, or annotations in academic or educational materials
  • β€’Testing font support and rendering for cuneiform Unicode characters
  • β€’Programming documents or web pages that include cuneiform text with precise codepoints

Examples

𒃉 Cuneiform Sign GA2 Times EN

  • 𒃉𒃉𒃉 𒃉 in a cuneiform sign list
  • 𒃉In the transcription: 𒃉 appears between two other signs
  • 𒃉Caption: Example of GA2 TIMES EN, 𒃉
  • 𒃉Use the codepoint U+120C9 for the character 𒃉
  • 𒃉Font test string: 𒃉 𒃉 𒃉

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+120C9
HTML Entity𒃉
HTML Code𒃉
CSS\120C9

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Ga2 Times En character mean?

β€œπ’ƒ‰β€ is the Unicode character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GA2 TIMES EN” (U+120C9). The name indicates it belongs to the cuneiform writing system and is associated with a sign combination or naming convention using β€œGA2” and β€œEN” connected with β€œtimes.” In practice, this means it’s used as a distinct character in Unicode-based cuneiform texts, sign lists, or scholarly transcription workflows where specific sign identities matter. If you’re building documents, fonts, or studies that rely on exact character matching, you should use this exact codepoint rather than a visually similar symbol.

What is the Unicode codepoint for 𒃉?

The symbol 𒃉 has the Unicode codepoint U+120C9.

What is the HTML entity and CSS/JavaScript escape for this character?

HTML entity: 𒃉. CSS escape: \\120C9. JavaScript escape: \\u{120C9}.

How should I copy 𒃉 for my document or design?

Copy the character directly (𒃉) or use the exact codepoint (U+120C9) to avoid mismatches with similar-looking symbols.

Will 𒃉 display correctly in all fonts?

Not alwaysβ€”cuneiform characters depend on font support. If you see tofu (empty boxes), try a font that includes cuneiform Unicode coverage.