Cuneiform Sign Ku7 Character
π― is the cuneiform sign known in Unicode as CUNEIFORM SIGN KU7 (U+121AF).
U+121AF
This page helps you copy and use the cuneiform character π―. It is encoded in Unicode as CUNEIFORM SIGN KU7, with ready-to-use copy options for web and app text.
Cuneiform Sign Ku7 Character Meaning
π― is a cuneiform character identified in Unicode by the name βCUNEIFORM SIGN KU7β (code point U+121AF). In writing systems, cuneiform signs are individual graphical units used to represent sounds, syllables, or word elements depending on the period and text tradition. For creators and developers, the most practical βmeaningβ is its identity as a specific Unicode character: KU7. That makes it useful when matching glyphs for epigraphic studies, labeling, typography experiments, or when reproducing text that already references KU7.
Common uses
- β’Copying the exact Unicode character for cuneiform text or labels that specify KU7
- β’Typography and font testing for the Unicode range around U+121AF
- β’Creating educational materials or worksheets that enumerate cuneiform signs by their Unicode names
- β’UI mockups or app content that requires precise glyph rendering and consistent character identity
- β’Digital humanities workflows where text must preserve exact cuneiform sign code points
Examples
π― Cuneiform Sign KU7
- π―The sign π― corresponds to Unicode CUNEIFORM SIGN KU7.
- π―Use U+121AF when entering π― in your document.
- π―A glyph preview shows π― as KU7 in the cuneiform block.
- π―In my stylesheet, I insert π― using its Unicode escape.
- π―The dataset lists π― under the cuneiform sign KU7.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+121AF | |
| HTML Entity | 𒆯 | |
| HTML Code | 𒆯 | |
| CSS | \121AF |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Ku7 character mean?
π― is a cuneiform character identified in Unicode by the name βCUNEIFORM SIGN KU7β (code point U+121AF). In writing systems, cuneiform signs are individual graphical units used to represent sounds, syllables, or word elements depending on the period and text tradition. For creators and developers, the most practical βmeaningβ is its identity as a specific Unicode character: KU7. That makes it useful when matching glyphs for epigraphic studies, labeling, typography experiments, or when reproducing text that already references KU7.
What is the Unicode code point for π―?
π― is Unicode U+121AF.
How can I copy π― into HTML?
Use the HTML entity: 𒆯
What JavaScript escape can I use for π―?
Use: \\u{121AF}
Why might π― not display correctly on my device?
Cuneiform glyphs depend on available fonts. If your system lacks a font for U+121AF, it may render as a blank box or fallback character.