free-symbols

Braille Pattern Dots-126 Braille

⠣ is a braille pattern character: dots 1, 2, and 6 (Unicode U+2823).

U+2823

⠣ is a Unicode braille pattern, identified as “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-126” (U+2823). You can use it anywhere braille pattern symbols are supported—such as accessibility-focused text, teaching materials, and UI prototypes.

Braille Pattern Dots-126 Braille Meaning

⠣ (U+2823) is a braille pattern sign made from dots 1, 2, and 6. Unlike fully interpreted braille letters or contractions, this character represents a specific dot layout rather than a single standardized “letter” on its own. In practice, people use it to display or demonstrate braille dot configurations, to build custom braille teaching content, or to represent a particular dot group in experiments, tooling, and typography. If you are mapping braille to language or codes, confirm the dot layout against your specific braille system and translation rules.

Common uses

  • Showing a specific braille dot layout in educational or training content
  • Designing accessible UI prototypes that need explicit braille patterns
  • Creating worksheets or flashcards that teach dot numbering and patterns
  • Debugging or visualizing braille rendering in apps and browsers
  • Labeling or annotating braille pattern sets in documentation

Examples

⠣ Braille Pattern Dots-126

  • Dot layout preview: ⠣
  • Braille dots 1-2-6: ⠣
  • In this pattern set, the third symbol is ⠣.
  • Teaching note: ⠣ represents dots 1, 2, and 6.
  • Use ⠣ to demonstrate the dot configuration clearly.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+2823
HTML Entity⠣
HTML Code⠣
CSS\2823

FAQ

What does ⠣ stand for?

⠣ is the Unicode braille pattern “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-126”, meaning dots 1, 2, and 6 are raised.

Is ⠣ a braille letter or a dot pattern?

It’s a dot pattern character (a specific layout), not a fully interpreted language letter by itself.

How do I copy ⠣ in code?

You can use the Unicode code point U+2823, or copy the provided HTML entity ⠣ / CSS escape \\2823 / JavaScript escape \\u{2823}.

Will ⠣ display correctly everywhere?

It depends on font and platform support for Unicode braille patterns, but the code point is U+2823 (html: ⠣).