Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Kad3 Plus Ash Character
π is a cuneiform sign identified by the Unicode name LU2 TIMES KAD3 PLUS ASH (U+12207).
U+12207
π (U+12207) is a specific cuneiform character used in Unicode-encoded writing systems. This page helps you copy it reliably and paste it into design, documentation, or code.
Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Kad3 Plus Ash Character Meaning
π is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES KAD3 PLUS ASHβ (U+12207). In practice, the symbol is mainly used in Unicode text to represent this particular cuneiform sign for transcription, encoding, and display. Researchers, students, and digital humanities projects may use it when reproducing signs from inscriptions or writing systems. Designers and developers also use it to build accurate typographic content, test font coverage, or label references where a precise sign identity matters. Because cuneiform sign values can vary by source and context, the safest approach is to treat this as a specific encoded character rather than a universal βwordβ on its own.
Common uses
- β’Academic transcription of cuneiform texts and sign lists
- β’Digital humanities notes and annotated manuscripts
- β’Typography and font testing to confirm support for U+12207
- β’Cataloging/labeling in databases that store Unicode sign characters
- β’Creating accurate symbols in educational or reference materials
Examples
π Cuneiform Sign LU2 Times KAD3 Plus Ash
- πUnicode check: π (U+12207)
- πSign list entry: π β CUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES KAD3 PLUS ASH
- πTest string: πππ
- πExample notation: see π in the sign inventory
- πCopy into document: π
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+12207 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒈇 | |
| HTML Code | 𒈇 | |
| CSS | \12207 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Lu2 Times Kad3 Plus Ash character mean?
π is a cuneiform sign with the Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN LU2 TIMES KAD3 PLUS ASHβ (U+12207). In practice, the symbol is mainly used in Unicode text to represent this particular cuneiform sign for transcription, encoding, and display. Researchers, students, and digital humanities projects may use it when reproducing signs from inscriptions or writing systems. Designers and developers also use it to build accurate typographic content, test font coverage, or label references where a precise sign identity matters. Because cuneiform sign values can vary by source and context, the safest approach is to treat this as a specific encoded character rather than a universal βwordβ on its own.
What is the Unicode code point for π?
The Unicode code point is U+12207.
How can I paste π using HTML?
Use the HTML entity: 𒈇.
What CSS and JavaScript escapes work for this character?
CSS escape: \\12207. JavaScript escape: \\u{12207}.
Will π display correctly on all devices?
It depends on whether the userβs device and installed fonts support this cuneiform character (U+12207). If the font is missing, it may not render properly.