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π’‡Ώ

Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Bad Character

π’‡Ώ is a cuneiform sign (U+121FF) identified as β€œLU2 TIMES BAD.”

U+121FF

π’‡Ώ (U+121FF) is a cuneiform character used in writing systems represented by Unicode. This page helps you copy the symbol and insert it into HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. It also provides practical examples for documents, fonts, and digital text.

Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Bad Character Meaning

π’‡Ώ is the Unicode character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES BAD” with codepoint U+121FF. The name indicates it is a specific cuneiform sign entry (LU2 TIMES BAD), which is typically used when transcribing or referencing cuneiform texts in digital form. Like other cuneiform characters, its exact reading or interpretation depends on the surrounding signs and the scholarly transcription or dataset you are following. If you are encoding text, the most reliable approach is to treat it as the specific sign identified by its Unicode codepoint and use it consistently with your source transcription.

Common uses

  • β€’Transcribing cuneiform texts in digital humanities projects
  • β€’Adding specific cuneiform symbols to scholarly notes or catalogs
  • β€’Building Unicode test strings for fonts and rendering checks
  • β€’Creating searchable reference lists for sign inventories
  • β€’Using the character in educational materials or displays of cuneiform scripts

Examples

π’‡Ώ Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Bad

  • π’‡ΏU+121FF: π’‡Ώ
  • π’‡ΏLU2 times BAD: π’‡Ώ
  • π’‡ΏEnter the cuneiform sign π’‡Ώ into your document.
  • π’‡ΏCheck whether your font supports π’‡Ώ.
  • π’‡ΏSign inventory note: π’‡Ώ (CUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES BAD).

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+121FF
HTML Entity𒇿
HTML Code𒇿
CSS\121FF

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Bad character mean?

π’‡Ώ is the Unicode character named β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES BAD” with codepoint U+121FF. The name indicates it is a specific cuneiform sign entry (LU2 TIMES BAD), which is typically used when transcribing or referencing cuneiform texts in digital form. Like other cuneiform characters, its exact reading or interpretation depends on the surrounding signs and the scholarly transcription or dataset you are following. If you are encoding text, the most reliable approach is to treat it as the specific sign identified by its Unicode codepoint and use it consistently with your source transcription.

What is the Unicode codepoint for π’‡Ώ?

π’‡Ώ is U+121FF.

How can I paste π’‡Ώ into HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: 𒇿.

How do I represent π’‡Ώ in JavaScript?

Use: \\u{121FF}.

Does the name β€œLU2 TIMES BAD” fully explain its meaning?

The name identifies the specific Unicode cuneiform sign entry. In practice, interpretation can depend on surrounding signs and the transcription standard you are using.

Related symbols