Imperial Aramaic Number Three Character
π‘ represents the Imperial Aramaic number three (Unicode U+1085A).
U+1085A
π‘ is a character from the Imperial Aramaic block. It is identified in Unicode as βIMPERIAL ARAMAIC NUMBER THREEβ and has codepoint U+1085A.
Imperial Aramaic Number Three Character Meaning
π‘ (IMPERIAL ARAMAIC NUMBER THREE, U+1085A) is a specific numeral character used within the Imperial Aramaic writing system. Like many historic scripts encoded in Unicode, it is most often encountered in scholarly materials, reference texts, or digital reproductions of manuscripts and inscriptions. When you need to represent the number three exactly as it appears in Imperial Aramaic, this symbol is the appropriate choice. If you are building searchable content, indexing, or typography for historic scripts, using the correct character rather than a lookalike prevents mismatches and ensures correct rendering.
Common uses
- β’Add accurate Imperial Aramaic numerals to digital editions of inscriptions or texts
- β’Create typographic layouts for historic script references and learning materials
- β’Encode the value three in Imperial Aramaic contexts for research notes
- β’Include the symbol in cataloging or metadata where exact Unicode characters matter
- β’Design user-facing text for blogs, posters, or social content focused on ancient scripts
Examples
π‘ Imperial Aramaic Number Three
- π‘π‘
- π‘The numeral three is written as π‘ in Imperial Aramaic.
- π‘Example inscription: π‘ marks the third item.
- π‘In Unicode, this character is U+1085A: π‘.
- π‘Use π‘ when you need the Imperial Aramaic form of three.
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1085A | |
| HTML Entity | 𐡚 | |
| HTML Code | 𐡚 | |
| CSS | \1085A |
FAQ
What does the Imperial Aramaic Number Three character mean?
π‘ (IMPERIAL ARAMAIC NUMBER THREE, U+1085A) is a specific numeral character used within the Imperial Aramaic writing system. Like many historic scripts encoded in Unicode, it is most often encountered in scholarly materials, reference texts, or digital reproductions of manuscripts and inscriptions. When you need to represent the number three exactly as it appears in Imperial Aramaic, this symbol is the appropriate choice. If you are building searchable content, indexing, or typography for historic scripts, using the correct character rather than a lookalike prevents mismatches and ensures correct rendering.
What Unicode character is π‘?
π‘ is βIMPERIAL ARAMAIC NUMBER THREEβ with Unicode codepoint U+1085A.
How can I copy π‘ in HTML?
You can use the HTML entity: 𐡚
What are the CSS and JavaScript escapes for π‘?
CSS escape: \\1085A. JavaScript escape: \\u{1085A}.
Will π‘ render correctly on all devices?
Rendering depends on whether the font installed supports this Unicode character. If it doesnβt, you may see a fallback box or missing glyph.