free-symbols
𒇲

Cuneiform Sign Lal Character

𒇲 is the Cuneiform Sign LAL, a single cuneiform character you can copy for titles, notes, or digital design.

U+121F2

𒇲 is a cuneiform character known as the Cuneiform Sign LAL. If you need the exact glyph for typography, documents, or web content, this page gives practical copy options and encoding formats.

Cuneiform Sign Lal Character Meaning

𒇲 is the Unicode character named “CUNEIFORM SIGN LAL” with code point U+121F2 (category: Cuneiform). In everyday digital use, it’s best understood as a specific single cuneiform symbol—useful when you are labeling, formatting, or referencing cuneiform text in a consistent way. The main goal is accuracy: copy the character directly or use one of the provided encodings (HTML, CSS, or JavaScript) so it renders correctly across platforms that support the Unicode range. When it appears as a standalone mark in your text, it represents that exact glyph, not a generic “cuneiform” icon.

Common uses

  • Add a cuneiform-style character to a design mockup, poster, or logo concept
  • Reference a specific cuneiform sign in a study note, caption, or catalog entry
  • Label a diagram or column header with the exact sign glyph
  • Include the character in websites or apps using the provided Unicode escapes
  • Create social media posts or art text that uses authentic cuneiform characters

Examples

𒇲 Cuneiform Sign LAL

  • 𒇲Practice writing: 𒇲
  • 𒇲Sign reference: 𒇲 (U+121F2)
  • 𒇲Cuneiform header: 𒇲 — study notes
  • 𒇲Insert into your typography sample: 𒇲
  • 𒇲Figure label: 𒇲

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+121F2
HTML Entity𒇲
HTML Code𒇲
CSS\121F2

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Lal character mean?

𒇲 is the Unicode character named “CUNEIFORM SIGN LAL” with code point U+121F2 (category: Cuneiform). In everyday digital use, it’s best understood as a specific single cuneiform symbol—useful when you are labeling, formatting, or referencing cuneiform text in a consistent way. The main goal is accuracy: copy the character directly or use one of the provided encodings (HTML, CSS, or JavaScript) so it renders correctly across platforms that support the Unicode range. When it appears as a standalone mark in your text, it represents that exact glyph, not a generic “cuneiform” icon.

How do I copy 𒇲 correctly?

Copy the character directly from this page (𒇲). For web or code, use the provided HTML entity (𒇲) or the Unicode escapes.

What is the Unicode code point for 𒇲?

The Unicode code point is U+121F2.

What HTML or code escapes can I use for this symbol?

HTML entity: 𒇲. CSS escape: \\121F2. JavaScript (Unicode): \\u{121F2}.

Why doesn’t 𒇲 display on my device?

Some fonts and browsers don’t support the Cuneiform Unicode range. Try switching to a font that includes U+121F2 or test in a Unicode-capable environment.