free-symbols

Braille Pattern Dots-12467 Braille

⡫ represents the Braille pattern dots 1, 2, 4, 6, and 7.

U+286B

⡫ (U+286B) is a Braille pattern character used to represent a specific set of raised dots. It’s helpful when you need a precise Braille-cell shape in text. You can copy the symbol or use its Unicode escapes in software.

Braille Pattern Dots-12467 Braille Meaning

⡫ is a Unicode Braille pattern symbol named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-12467” (U+286B). Like other Braille pattern characters, it encodes the exact arrangement of raised dots in a single Braille cell: dots 1, 2, 4, 6, and 7. This makes it useful for labeling, mockups, accessibility-focused typography, and documentation where you want to display or describe a specific Braille dot configuration rather than a full contracted word. It may be used alongside other Braille patterns to build consistent visual representations of Braille content in text.

Common uses

  • Designing accessible UI mockups that include specific Braille-cell dot patterns
  • Labeling educational materials about Braille dot positions and arrangements
  • Documenting Braille encoding/pattern diagrams in writing and technical notes
  • Creating typography or icon-like elements that represent a fixed Braille cell shape
  • Using Unicode escapes in code to reliably render the exact Braille pattern

Examples

⡫ Braille Pattern Dots-12467

  • Dots 1-2-4-6-7: ⡫
  • Braille pattern (U+286B): ⡫
  • In the diagram, the raised dots are shown as ⡫
  • Use ⡫ to represent that specific dot layout.
  • Unicode Braille symbol: ⡫

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+286B
HTML Entity⡫
HTML Code⡫
CSS\286B

FAQ

What does ⡫ mean?

⡫ is the Braille pattern character for dots 1, 2, 4, 6, and 7 (Unicode name: BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-12467, code point U+286B).

How do I copy ⡫ into my document?

Copy the symbol “⡫” directly from this page. If your app has trouble rendering it, try pasting via the Unicode/HTML values like ⡫.

What are the Unicode values for this symbol?

Unicode code point is U+286B. HTML entity is ⡫ and common escapes include \\286B (CSS) and \\u{286B} (JavaScript).

Will it look the same in every font?

Not always—Braille pattern support depends on the font. If it appears as an empty box or different glyph, switch to a font with Unicode Braille coverage.