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π’Š₯

Cuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur Character

π’Š₯ is the cuneiform sign β€œSag times Ur” (U+122A5) used in Unicode text and cuneiform-related content.

U+122A5

π’Š₯ is a cuneiform character encoded in Unicode as U+122A5. It’s useful when you’re preparing cuneiform text, listings, or typography samples. This page helps you copy the symbol and use the correct escapes in software.

Cuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur Character Meaning

π’Š₯ is identified by Unicode as β€œCuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur” (U+122A5). In cuneiform scholarship and digital text, such names usually reflect how the sign is constructed or referenced within sign lists. Practically, you can treat it as a distinct, standalone character for transcription, cataloging, and display. If you’re working with a specific transliteration or font set, the exact reading value may depend on the source text and sign inventory you follow. For most users, the most important part is using the correct Unicode code point and ensuring your font supports cuneiform.

Common uses

  • β€’Transcribing cuneiform text in Unicode for academic notes or digital documents
  • β€’Labeling or indexing signs in a sign list, spreadsheet, or database export
  • β€’Creating typography or Unicode coverage samples for cuneiform fonts
  • β€’Publishing educational content about cuneiform characters and their identifiers
  • β€’Drafting social posts or glossaries that include the exact Unicode character

Examples

π’Š₯ Cuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur

  • π’Š₯Sag Times Ur: π’Š₯
  • π’Š₯Unicode U+122A5 corresponds to π’Š₯.
  • π’Š₯Cuneiform sign transcription uses π’Š₯ in this entry.
  • π’Š₯Font test: π’Š₯ should render correctly.
  • π’Š₯Sign list item: π’Š₯ (CUNEIFORM SIGN SAG TIMES UR)

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+122A5
HTML Entity𒊥
HTML Code𒊥
CSS\122A5

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur character mean?

π’Š₯ is identified by Unicode as β€œCuneiform Sign Sag Times Ur” (U+122A5). In cuneiform scholarship and digital text, such names usually reflect how the sign is constructed or referenced within sign lists. Practically, you can treat it as a distinct, standalone character for transcription, cataloging, and display. If you’re working with a specific transliteration or font set, the exact reading value may depend on the source text and sign inventory you follow. For most users, the most important part is using the correct Unicode code point and ensuring your font supports cuneiform.

What is the Unicode code point for π’Š₯?

π’Š₯ is U+122A5.

How can I copy π’Š₯ into HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: 𒊥

What escapes can I use in code?

CSS escape: \\122A5. JavaScript (Unicode escape): \\u{122A5}.

Why doesn’t π’Š₯ show up on my screen?

It usually means your current font doesn’t support this cuneiform character. Try a Unicode cuneiform-capable font.

Related symbols