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π’„€

Cuneiform Sign Gum Times She Character

π’„€ is the cuneiform sign β€œGUM TIMES SHE” (U+12124), used in written representations of cuneiform texts.

U+12124

π’„€ is a cuneiform character identified as β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GUM TIMES SHE.” It’s commonly used when people typeset or reference cuneiform signs in digital text. Use the copy variations below for reliable rendering across devices that support this Unicode character.

Cuneiform Sign Gum Times She Character Meaning

π’„€ (U+12124) is a cuneiform sign whose Unicode name is β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GUM TIMES SHE.” Like many cuneiform characters, its role depends on the surrounding signs and the text tradition being represented. In digital documents, it’s mainly used to reproduce sign sequences from manuscripts, inscriptions, or scholarly transcriptions where specific sign identities matter. When you copy π’„€ into your work, you’re preserving the exact Unicode character rather than using a look-alike glyph, which helps keep references consistent in fonts, Unicode-aware editors, and publishing workflows.

Common uses

  • β€’Transcribing cuneiform texts in digital humanities projects
  • β€’Labeling or indexing sign lists and Unicode character charts
  • β€’Creating educational materials about cuneiform sign notation
  • β€’Typing scholarly examples where exact sign identity is required
  • β€’Building searchable text fields for cuneiform sign studies

Examples

π’„€ Cuneiform Sign GUM Times SHE

  • π’„€π’„€ π’„‘ π’„” (sign sequence in a transcription)
  • π’„€In the table, the entry for U+12124 is π’„€.
  • π’„€The notation uses π’„€ to represent a specific cuneiform sign.
  • π’„€I referenced Unicode for π’„€ when encoding the passage.
  • π’„€Add π’„€ to your sign index for consistent labeling.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+12124
HTML Entity𒄤
HTML Code𒄤
CSS\12124

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Gum Times She character mean?

π’„€ (U+12124) is a cuneiform sign whose Unicode name is β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GUM TIMES SHE.” Like many cuneiform characters, its role depends on the surrounding signs and the text tradition being represented. In digital documents, it’s mainly used to reproduce sign sequences from manuscripts, inscriptions, or scholarly transcriptions where specific sign identities matter. When you copy π’„€ into your work, you’re preserving the exact Unicode character rather than using a look-alike glyph, which helps keep references consistent in fonts, Unicode-aware editors, and publishing workflows.

What is the Unicode code point for π’„€?

π’„€ is U+12124.

How can I copy π’„€ reliably for use in web or code?

Copy the character itself (π’„€) or use the provided escapes: HTML entity and JavaScript/CSS escapes shown on this page data.

Why does π’„€ look different across devices?

Rendering depends on whether the font you’re using supports the cuneiform Unicode character U+12124. Without support, you may see a fallback glyph.

Does the meaning of π’„€ stay the same in every text?

Its exact interpretation can depend on the sign sequence and transcription conventions, but in Unicode terms it always refers to the same character: β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN GUM TIMES SHE” (U+12124).

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