Cuneiform Sign Kisim5 Character
π¨ is the cuneiform sign KISIM5 (U+121A8), used in digital reproductions of cuneiform text.
U+121A8
π¨ is a cuneiform character known as CUNEIFORM SIGN KISIM5. Itβs encoded in Unicode at U+121A8, making it easy to copy into documents, web pages, or design tools. Use the sections below to get reliable copy/paste and developer-friendly escapes.
Cuneiform Sign Kisim5 Character Meaning
CUNEIFORM SIGN KISIM5 (Unicode U+121A8) is a specific cuneiform character identified by name within the Unicode Standard. Like many cuneiform signs, KISIM5 can appear as part of reconstructed or transcribed writing systems in scholarly work, digital epigraphy, and fan-made character sets. On the page itself, the most practical βmeaningβ for users is its identity as a distinct sign glyph you can reliably insert and reference in text. When using it in your own content, treat it as a particular sign form rather than a general symbol with a single, universal word-for-word meaning.
Common uses
- β’Copying into academic notes or transcriptions that reference the sign by its Unicode character
- β’Designing posters, thumbnails, or typography samples that include cuneiform characters
- β’Building a custom cuneiform keyboard or input method mapping sign names to glyphs
- β’Adding correct glyphs to subtitles, social posts, or captions for cuneiform content
- β’Using the Unicode character in HTML/CSS/JavaScript without relying on fonts that lack the glyph
Examples
π¨ Cuneiform Sign KISIM5
- π¨π¨ in Unicode text: U+121A8
- π¨Cuneiform Sign KISIM5: π¨
- π¨Glyph test: π¨ π¨ π¨
- π¨Unicode escape check: \\u{121A8}
- π¨Typeface sample includes π¨
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+121A8 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒆨 | |
| HTML Code | 𒆨 | |
| CSS | \121A8 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Kisim5 character mean?
CUNEIFORM SIGN KISIM5 (Unicode U+121A8) is a specific cuneiform character identified by name within the Unicode Standard. Like many cuneiform signs, KISIM5 can appear as part of reconstructed or transcribed writing systems in scholarly work, digital epigraphy, and fan-made character sets. On the page itself, the most practical βmeaningβ for users is its identity as a distinct sign glyph you can reliably insert and reference in text. When using it in your own content, treat it as a particular sign form rather than a general symbol with a single, universal word-for-word meaning.
What is the Unicode codepoint for π¨?
π¨ is U+121A8.
How can I copy π¨ reliably into a web page?
Use the character directly (π¨) or an HTML entity: 𒆨.
What JavaScript escape can I use for this character?
Use \\u{121A8}.
Does the symbol have another common name besides CUNEIFORM SIGN KISIM5?
The most readable name on this page is Cuneiform Sign KISIM5 (matching the Unicode character name).