free-symbols

Braille Pattern Dots-134578 Braille

⣝ is a Braille pattern character representing dots 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8.

U+28DD

⣝ is a Unicode Braille pattern block character. It’s commonly used when you need a precise Braille dot pattern in plain text.

Braille Pattern Dots-134578 Braille Meaning

⣝ is named “Braille pattern dots-134578” (Unicode U+28DD). As a Braille pattern character, it represents a specific arrangement of raised dots: 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8. In practice, these pattern characters are often used for dot-art, tactile-style UI elements, and for labeling or illustrating Braille dot configurations in documents, prototypes, or educational materials. Because it’s a pattern glyph rather than a standard language letter itself, its “meaning” is usually about the dot layout you want to show or reproduce accurately rather than a single universally fixed word.

Common uses

  • Displaying a specific Braille dot configuration in plain text
  • Creating Braille-inspired separators or UI markers in text-based interfaces
  • Labeling educational materials that teach dot numbering and layouts
  • Building dot-art patterns and grid-based designs using Unicode
  • Using the exact Unicode character in developer tools, logs, or mockups

Examples

⣝ Braille pattern dots-134578

  • Dot pattern: ⣝
  • Braille layout (1-3-4-5-7-8): ⣝
  • Use this glyph for the raised-dot pattern: ⣝
  • Key legend: ⣝ = dots 1,3,4,5,7,8
  • Pattern sample: ⣝ ⣝ ⣝

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+28DD
HTML Entity⣝
HTML Code⣝
CSS\28DD

FAQ

What does ⣝ stand for?

It’s a Unicode Braille pattern character named “Braille pattern dots-134578,” representing dots 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8.

How do I copy ⣝ into a website or app?

You can copy the character directly (⣝), or use the HTML entity ⣝ or the Unicode code point U+28DD.

Is ⣝ the same as a Braille letter?

It represents a dot pattern layout. Whether it corresponds to a specific language character depends on the Braille encoding system you’re using; the glyph itself is primarily the dot configuration.

Will ⣝ display correctly on all devices?

Most modern systems support this Unicode Braille character, but display can vary based on fonts. If you see a missing-glyph box, try a different Unicode-capable font.