Cuneiform Sign Ninda2 Times She Plus A An Character
π is a cuneiform sign encoded in Unicode as U+1225B.
U+1225B
π is a Unicode cuneiform character identified as βCUNEIFORM SIGN NINDA2 TIMES SHE PLUS A ANβ (U+1225B). You can copy it into design, typography, notes, or digital documents that support this character. Below youβll find practical ways to use and represent it in text and code.
Cuneiform Sign Ninda2 Times She Plus A An Character Meaning
π is a specific cuneiform sign with the official Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN NINDA2 TIMES SHE PLUS A ANβ (U+1225B). Because cuneiform signs are tied to historical writing systems, its exact interpretation can depend on the tablet tradition, period, and surrounding context. In practice for modern users, itβs most often used as a precise, single-character glyph when writing or referencing cuneiform texts, building typographic layouts, or labeling/annotating digital representations of cuneiform materials. Treat the character as a distinct sign form and rely on your source texts or transliteration conventions for exact readings.
Common uses
- β’Copy/paste a specific cuneiform glyph into digital documents or notes
- β’Use in typography or font testing when checking support for U+1225B
- β’Add a labeled character to educational materials about cuneiform script
- β’Include in UI mockups, posters, or infographics that feature cuneiform text samples
- β’Reference the sign in databases, spreadsheets, or coding datasets by its Unicode character
Examples
π Cuneiform Sign NINDA2 Times She Plus A AN
- ππ
- πCuneiform sample: π
- πUnicode check: U+1225B β π
- πGlyph in context: πππ
- πSign label: π (NINDA2 TIMES SHE PLUS A AN)
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1225B | |
| HTML Entity | 𒉛 | |
| HTML Code | 𒉛 | |
| CSS | \1225B |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Ninda2 Times She Plus A An character mean?
π is a specific cuneiform sign with the official Unicode name βCUNEIFORM SIGN NINDA2 TIMES SHE PLUS A ANβ (U+1225B). Because cuneiform signs are tied to historical writing systems, its exact interpretation can depend on the tablet tradition, period, and surrounding context. In practice for modern users, itβs most often used as a precise, single-character glyph when writing or referencing cuneiform texts, building typographic layouts, or labeling/annotating digital representations of cuneiform materials. Treat the character as a distinct sign form and rely on your source texts or transliteration conventions for exact readings.
What is the Unicode code point for π?
π is U+1225B.
What is the official Unicode name of this character?
βCUNEIFORM SIGN NINDA2 TIMES SHE PLUS A ANβ.
How can I copy π reliably in different tools?
Copy the character directly (π) or use the code point/escapes: HTML entity 𒉛, CSS escape \\1225B, or JavaScript escape \\u{1225B}.
Will all fonts display π correctly?
Not necessarily. π requires a font that supports this Unicode cuneiform block; otherwise it may appear as a missing-glyph box.