Cuneiform Sign Tag Times Bi Character
𒋴 is the cuneiform sign “TAG TIMES BI” (U+122F4) used in cuneiform text and scholarly transcription.
U+122F4
𒋴 is a cuneiform character with the Unicode name “CUNEIFORM SIGN TAG TIMES BI.” It’s commonly used when writing or typesetting cuneiform in digital text. Use the copy options below to place it in documents, websites, or code.
Cuneiform Sign Tag Times Bi Character Meaning
𒋴 has the Unicode name “CUNEIFORM SIGN TAG TIMES BI” (U+122F4). As with many cuneiform signs, its value is determined by the writing system and the specific tablet or transcription convention being followed. In practice, people use this character to represent a particular sign identified in Unicode and in cuneiform transliteration workflows. If you’re building fonts, encoding cuneiform, or adding characters to captions and documents, you’ll typically treat it as a specific labeled sign rather than a standalone “word” outside its script context.
Common uses
- •Transcribing cuneiform texts into digital documents
- •Labeling or referencing specific Unicode cuneiform signs in study notes
- •Typography and font testing for cuneiform glyph coverage
- •Adding characters to web pages using HTML/CSS/JavaScript
- •Creating mockups or datasets for epigraphy and transcription tools
Examples
𒋴 Cuneiform Sign Tag Times BI
- 𒋴𒋴 appears in the Unicode cuneiform set as U+122F4.
- 𒋴In my transcription table, the sign is written as 𒋴.
- 𒋴Please ensure the font supports 𒋴 before publishing.
- 𒋴I used 𒋴 in the dataset to mark the “TAG TIMES BI” sign.
- 𒋴The caption includes 𒋴 for clarity in sign indexing.
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+122F4 | |
| HTML Entity | 𒋴 | |
| HTML Code | 𒋴 | |
| CSS | \122F4 |
FAQ
What does the Cuneiform Sign Tag Times Bi character mean?
𒋴 has the Unicode name “CUNEIFORM SIGN TAG TIMES BI” (U+122F4). As with many cuneiform signs, its value is determined by the writing system and the specific tablet or transcription convention being followed. In practice, people use this character to represent a particular sign identified in Unicode and in cuneiform transliteration workflows. If you’re building fonts, encoding cuneiform, or adding characters to captions and documents, you’ll typically treat it as a specific labeled sign rather than a standalone “word” outside its script context.
What is the Unicode code point for 𒋴?
𒋴 is U+122F4.
How do I copy 𒋴 into HTML?
Use the HTML entity: 𒋴.
What is the CSS escape for 𒋴?
Use \\122F4 in CSS.
What is the JavaScript escape for 𒋴?
Use \\u{122F4} in JavaScript.