Cuneiform Sign Su Character
π’ is the cuneiform sign SU (U+122E2), used when representing cuneiform script text.
U+122E2
π’ is a cuneiform character known as the Cuneiform Sign SU. Itβs part of the Unicode set for cuneiform script and can be copied into documents, web pages, and design tools. Below youβll find its exact code point and copy variations.
Cuneiform Sign Su Character Meaning
π’ is the Unicode character for βCUNEIFORM SIGN SUβ with code point U+122E2. As a cuneiform sign, it is used to represent a specific grapheme from cuneiform writing. In practice, people use it in digital transcriptions, educational materials, museum or museum-style displays, and typographic experiments involving cuneiform. Because cuneiform signs can occur in many scholarly contexts, the most reliable way to treat π’ is as a distinct letter/sign to be rendered exactly as written, rather than assuming a universal βword meaningβ outside a specific text or transliteration system.
Common uses
- β’Digital transcription of cuneiform text for study or reference
- β’Designing posters, book covers, or educational slides featuring cuneiform script
- β’Creating social media posts that include cuneiform characters
- β’Building Unicode-friendly typography mockups for language or history content
- β’Providing exact character samples in developer documentation or font testing
Examples
π’ Cuneiform Sign SU
- π’π’ appears in this Unicode character list.
- π’I typed π’ using the code point U+122E2.
- π’The sentence includes π’ as part of a cuneiform transcription.
- π’Try copying π’ into your editor to test rendering.
- π’Character: π’ (CUNEIFORM SIGN SU).
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+122E2 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒋢 | |
| HTML Code | 𒋢 | |
| CSS | \122E2 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Su character mean?
π’ is the Unicode character for βCUNEIFORM SIGN SUβ with code point U+122E2. As a cuneiform sign, it is used to represent a specific grapheme from cuneiform writing. In practice, people use it in digital transcriptions, educational materials, museum or museum-style displays, and typographic experiments involving cuneiform. Because cuneiform signs can occur in many scholarly contexts, the most reliable way to treat π’ is as a distinct letter/sign to be rendered exactly as written, rather than assuming a universal βword meaningβ outside a specific text or transliteration system.
What is the code point for π’?
π’ is U+122E2. Its HTML entity is 𒋢.
How can I copy π’ into HTML?
Use the provided HTML entity: 𒋢.
What CSS or programming escape can I use for π’?
CSS escape: \\122E2. JavaScript escape: \\u{122E2}.
Will π’ display correctly in my browser or editor?
It depends on font support. If your system has a cuneiform-capable font, π’ should render; otherwise it may appear as a missing glyph.