Cuneiform Sign Lagab Times Tag Character
π’ is the cuneiform sign βLagab times tagβ with the Unicode code point U+121E2.
U+121E2
π’ is a cuneiform character identified in Unicode as βCUNEIFORM SIGN LAGAB TIMES TAGβ (U+121E2). This page helps you copy it reliably across browsers, fonts, and tools. Use the provided escapes if youβre working with code or search fields.
Cuneiform Sign Lagab Times Tag Character Meaning
π’ (Unicode U+121E2) is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN LAGAB TIMES TAGβ. The exact interpretation of individual cuneiform signs can depend on the manuscript tradition, surrounding signs, and context, so itβs best to treat it as a specific character used in historical writing, transliteration, and Unicode text. Practically, it functions as a distinct symbol that you may need to include for accurate documentation, linguistic datasets, typographic layouts, or digital editions where cuneiform sign sequences must match a standardized representation.
Common uses
- β’Publishing a digital edition or glossary entry that requires the exact cuneiform sign π’
- β’Adding the character to a transliteration note, caption, or citation in a linguistics document
- β’Creating typographic or educational posters about cuneiform writing systems
- β’Building or testing Unicode text rendering and copy/paste behavior in software
- β’Preparing social media or web content featuring specific cuneiform signs by code point
Examples
π’ Cuneiform Sign Lagab Times Tag
- π’π’
- π’Unicode: U+121E2 = π’
- π’Sign name: CUNEIFORM SIGN LAGAB TIMES TAG (π’)
- π’Example sequence: π’ππ
- π’Use escape in code: \\121E2
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+121E2 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒇢 | |
| HTML Code | 𒇢 | |
| CSS | \121E2 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Lagab Times Tag character mean?
π’ (Unicode U+121E2) is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN LAGAB TIMES TAGβ. The exact interpretation of individual cuneiform signs can depend on the manuscript tradition, surrounding signs, and context, so itβs best to treat it as a specific character used in historical writing, transliteration, and Unicode text. Practically, it functions as a distinct symbol that you may need to include for accurate documentation, linguistic datasets, typographic layouts, or digital editions where cuneiform sign sequences must match a standardized representation.
What is the Unicode code point for π’?
π’ has the Unicode code point U+121E2.
How do I copy π’ reliably in HTML?
You can use the HTML entity 𒇢 or copy the character directly: π’.
What are the JavaScript and CSS escapes for this symbol?
CSS escape: \\121E2. JavaScript escape: \\u{121E2}.
Does the sign always have the same meaning in every text?
Its interpretation can depend on context and surrounding signs. In practice, the most reliable use is treating it as the specific standardized Unicode character for accurate digital representation.