Cuneiform Sign Sha3 Times Bad Character
π° is the cuneiform sign βSHA3 TIMES BADβ (U+122B0) used in Unicode cuneiform texts.
U+122B0
π° (U+122B0) is a Unicode cuneiform character named βCUNEIFORM SIGN SHA3 TIMES BAD.β This page helps you copy it reliably and understand how it may appear in cuneiform-related materials.
Cuneiform Sign Sha3 Times Bad Character Meaning
π° is a cuneiform sign identified in Unicode as βCUNEIFORM SIGN SHA3 TIMES BADβ (code point U+122B0). Cuneiform characters are often used as components in writing systems and scholarly transcriptions, where names describe relationships between sign elements. In practice, this character is mainly encountered in digital editions, font charts, and Unicode-based text where cuneiform signs must be represented precisely. If you are working with cuneiform transcription, typography, or encoding conversions, the most important βmeaningβ is its correct identity as a single Unicode character, not a typographic substitute.
Common uses
- β’Copying a specific cuneiform character into Unicode text for accurate transcription
- β’Using in digital humanities projects that map sign names to code points
- β’Labeling or annotating diagrams and font specimen pages for cuneiform blocks
- β’Testing font coverage or rendering of cuneiform characters in web/app text
- β’Including in study notes or datasets that store exact Unicode characters
Examples
π° Cuneiform Sign SHA3 Times BAD
- π°π° π π
- π°Unicode cuneiform: π°
- π°Sign reference: U+122B0 = π°
- π°Transcription sample includes π° in context
- π°Copy/paste character π° for your document
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+122B0 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒊰 | |
| HTML Code | 𒊰 | |
| CSS | \122B0 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Sha3 Times Bad character mean?
π° is a cuneiform sign identified in Unicode as βCUNEIFORM SIGN SHA3 TIMES BADβ (code point U+122B0). Cuneiform characters are often used as components in writing systems and scholarly transcriptions, where names describe relationships between sign elements. In practice, this character is mainly encountered in digital editions, font charts, and Unicode-based text where cuneiform signs must be represented precisely. If you are working with cuneiform transcription, typography, or encoding conversions, the most important βmeaningβ is its correct identity as a single Unicode character, not a typographic substitute.
What is the Unicode code point for π°?
π° is U+122B0.
How can I copy π° into HTML?
Use the HTML entity: 𒊰
What is the CSS escape for this character?
The CSS escape is \\122B0.
How do I include it in JavaScript?
You can use the JavaScript escape \\u{122B0}.