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𝍈

Tetragram For Darkening Symbol

𝍈 is the Tetragram for Darkening symbol, encoded at U+1D348 for easy copy and use.

U+1D348

You can use 𝍈 to add a distinct “darkening” visual mark to text, design mockups, or UI elements. This page helps you copy it reliably and find the correct Unicode details for your workflow. Use the escapes if you need to generate the character programmatically.

Tetragram For Darkening Symbol Meaning

“Tetragram for Darkening” (Unicode name: TETRAGRAM FOR DARKENING) is a single glyph character associated with the Tai Xuan Jing category. In practice, people commonly treat such symbols as stylized signs for mood, atmosphere, or thematic emphasis rather than everyday punctuation. You’ll often see it used in small decorative placements—such as headers, overlays, icons, or short textual “sigil” lines—where the symbol communicates a specific tone or intent. Because it’s a specific Unicode character (U+1D348), it’s also useful for typographic projects, symbol collections, and consistent rendering across platforms that support it.

Common uses

  • Designing themed graphics, posters, or covers with a “darkening” visual motif
  • Labeling UI elements or icons in games, story apps, or RPG tools
  • Creating social media headers or end-cards where a sigil-like character stands out
  • Using as a decorative separator or accent in short text blocks
  • Including in digital typography or Unicode symbol sets for research and documentation

Examples

𝍈 Tetragram for Darkening Symbol

  • 𝍈Meet the night: 𝍈
  • 𝍈Choose your path — 𝍈
  • 𝍈Shadow ritual begins with 𝍈
  • 𝍈Dark mode mark: 𝍈
  • 𝍈Seal: 𝍈

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1D348
HTML Entity𝍈
HTML Code𝍈
CSS\1D348

FAQ

What does the Tetragram For Darkening symbol mean?

“Tetragram for Darkening” (Unicode name: TETRAGRAM FOR DARKENING) is a single glyph character associated with the Tai Xuan Jing category. In practice, people commonly treat such symbols as stylized signs for mood, atmosphere, or thematic emphasis rather than everyday punctuation. You’ll often see it used in small decorative placements—such as headers, overlays, icons, or short textual “sigil” lines—where the symbol communicates a specific tone or intent. Because it’s a specific Unicode character (U+1D348), it’s also useful for typographic projects, symbol collections, and consistent rendering across platforms that support it.

What is the Unicode code point for 𝍈?

The symbol 𝍈 is encoded as U+1D348.

How do I copy 𝍈 safely into HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: 𝍈.

What escapes work in CSS or JavaScript?

CSS escape: \\1D348. JavaScript (Unicode escape): \\u{1D348}.

Will 𝍈 display on all devices?

It depends on font support for U+1D348. If a font lacks the glyph, it may fall back to a missing-character box.

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