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π’„΅

Cuneiform Sign Hi Times She Character

π’„΅ is a Cuneiform character (U+12135) named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN HI TIMES SHE.”

U+12135

π’„΅ (U+12135) is a Cuneiform sign assigned in Unicode. Use it when you need the exact character for digital texts, fonts, or references to cuneiform material.

Cuneiform Sign Hi Times She Character Meaning

π’„΅ is the Unicode Cuneiform character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN HI TIMES SHE” with code point U+12135. In practice, its β€œmeaning” is primarily the standardized identity of the sign in the Unicode character set. When composing text, the important thing is that you are using the correct character and code point, so the same sign renders consistently across systems that support it. If your project involves transcriptions or references to cuneiform tablets, treat this character as a specific named sign and rely on your source material or transliteration convention for the linguistic value.

Common uses

  • β€’Transcribing cuneiform sign lists or transliterations in digital documents
  • β€’Adding the exact character to a research note, bibliography, or catalog entry
  • β€’Designing educational materials or posters about writing systems
  • β€’Creating web content that references the Unicode character by code point
  • β€’Testing font support and rendering for Cuneiform in browsers and apps

Examples

π’„΅ CUNEIFORM SIGN HI TIMES SHE

  • π’„΅The sign π’„΅ appears in the list under U+12135.
  • π’„΅Unicode character: π’„΅ (CUNEIFORM SIGN HI TIMES SHE).
  • π’„΅In this transcription, π’„΅ is used for the named sign.
  • π’„΅Try rendering π’„΅ in your font stack to verify support.
  • π’„΅Code point check: U+12135 β†’ π’„΅.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+12135
HTML Entity𒄵
HTML Code𒄵
CSS\12135

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Hi Times She character mean?

π’„΅ is the Unicode Cuneiform character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN HI TIMES SHE” with code point U+12135. In practice, its β€œmeaning” is primarily the standardized identity of the sign in the Unicode character set. When composing text, the important thing is that you are using the correct character and code point, so the same sign renders consistently across systems that support it. If your project involves transcriptions or references to cuneiform tablets, treat this character as a specific named sign and rely on your source material or transliteration convention for the linguistic value.

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

π’„΅ is U+12135.

How can I copy π’„΅ for use in HTML?

You can use the HTML numeric entity: 𒄵.

What escapes can I use in CSS or JavaScript?

CSS escape: \\12135. JavaScript escape: \\u{12135}.

Why does π’„΅ sometimes not display correctly?

If your device or font doesn’t support the Cuneiform block, it may not render; try a Unicode-capable font that includes the Cuneiform range.