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ݤ

Arabic Letter Keheh With Three Dots Pointing Upwards Below Letter

ݤ is the Arabic Letter Keheh with three dots pointing upwards below (U+0764).

U+0764

ݤ is an Arabic-script character used in specific written forms. If you need to reproduce it in text, documents, or web content, you can copy it directly or use its Unicode codes.

Arabic Letter Keheh With Three Dots Pointing Upwards Below Letter Meaning

ݤ is an Arabic letter identified in Unicode as “ARABIC LETTER KEHEH WITH THREE DOTS POINTING UPWARDS BELOW” (U+0764). As with many Arabic-script characters, its exact role depends on the orthography of the language or writing standard where it is used. Practically, it’s most useful when you must match a particular spelling, transcription, or text standard that includes this exact letter shape and dot placement. When searching or typing, using the Unicode code point helps ensure you get the correct character rather than a visually similar Arabic letter.

Common uses

  • Copying and pasting exact Arabic text in messages, posts, or notes
  • Typography and UI mockups that must match a specific script character set
  • Preparing multilingual documents that use Unicode-accurate Arabic spelling
  • Linguistic transcription or cataloging where the exact letter form matters
  • Web development for displaying the correct character using Unicode

Examples

ݤ Arabic Letter Keheh with Three Dots Pointing Upwards Below

  • ݤݤ ݤ ݤ
  • ݤwrite: ݤ then continue the sentence
  • ݤname spelled with ݤ in the middle
  • ݤtranscription includes ݤ for this sound
  • ݤcharacter test string: ݤ U+0764

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+0764
HTML Entityݤ
HTML Codeݤ
CSS\0764

FAQ

What is the Unicode code point for ݤ?

The Unicode code point for ݤ is U+0764.

How can I copy ݤ easily into HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: ݤ.

What does the name “Three Dots Pointing Upwards Below” refer to?

It describes the letter’s distinctive three-dot marking positioned below the main Arabic letter form.

Is ݤ the same as other Arabic Keheh-like characters?

No. Because dot placement and exact character identity matter, you should use the precise character ݤ (U+0764) rather than visually similar letters.