✦free-symbols
π’Œ°

Cuneiform Sign Ur2 Times Nun Character

A cuneiform sign character: π’Œ° (Unicode U+12330).

U+12330

π’Œ° is a cuneiform character identified in Unicode as β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN UR2 TIMES NUN.” It’s useful for scholars, designers, and developers who need to reference or typeset this specific sign. Use the copy variations to match your workflow and fonts.

Cuneiform Sign Ur2 Times Nun Character Meaning

π’Œ° (U+12330) is a Unicode-encoded cuneiform sign with the name β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN UR2 TIMES NUN.” As part of cuneiform orthography, it is typically used in texts that represent historical scripts in a standardized digital form. In practical terms, users encounter this character when transcribing cuneiform material, formatting captions or indexes, or creating typographic content where the exact sign matters. When using it online, the main consideration is font support: not all fonts will render every cuneiform glyph. For reliable reproduction, copy the character directly (or use the provided escapes) and verify rendering in your target environment.

Common uses

  • β€’Copying and pasting the exact cuneiform sign into a transcription document
  • β€’Labeling or annotating cuneiform sign lists in study notes and spreadsheets
  • β€’Adding the character to a web page or digital publication using Unicode escapes
  • β€’Designing typographic layouts that require precise cuneiform symbols
  • β€’Creating content for researchers, educators, or museum-style digital exhibits

Examples

π’Œ° Cuneiform Sign UR2 Times NUN

  • π’Œ°π’Œ°
  • π’Œ°UR2 Γ— NUN is written as π’Œ° in Unicode.
  • π’Œ°The sign π’Œ° appears in this transliteration entry.
  • π’Œ°Insert π’Œ° into the cuneiform index to keep it consistent.
  • π’Œ°Unicode U+12330 corresponds to the character π’Œ°.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+12330
HTML Entity𒌰
HTML Code𒌰
CSS\12330

FAQ

What does the Cuneiform Sign Ur2 Times Nun character mean?

π’Œ° (U+12330) is a Unicode-encoded cuneiform sign with the name β€œCUNEIFORM SIGN UR2 TIMES NUN.” As part of cuneiform orthography, it is typically used in texts that represent historical scripts in a standardized digital form. In practical terms, users encounter this character when transcribing cuneiform material, formatting captions or indexes, or creating typographic content where the exact sign matters. When using it online, the main consideration is font support: not all fonts will render every cuneiform glyph. For reliable reproduction, copy the character directly (or use the provided escapes) and verify rendering in your target environment.

What is the Unicode code point for π’Œ°?

π’Œ° is U+12330.

How can I copy π’Œ° into HTML?

You can copy the character directly, or use the HTML entity 𒌰.

What are the CSS and JavaScript escapes for this character?

CSS escape: \\12330. JavaScript escape: \\u{12330}.

Will π’Œ° display correctly on all devices?

It depends on font support. Some fonts may not include the cuneiform glyph for U+12330, so check rendering in your target environment.