Bengali Currency Numerator Two Letter
৵ is the Bengali Currency Numerator Two character used in Bengali currency notation contexts.
U+09F5
The symbol ৵ is a Unicode character identified as BENGALI CURRENCY NUMERATOR TWO. It’s useful when you need the exact Bengali currency numerator glyph in text, documents, or interfaces. Below you’ll find practical ways to copy and use it, plus related code and variations.
Bengali Currency Numerator Two Letter Meaning
৵ (Unicode U+09F5) is named BENGALI CURRENCY NUMERATOR TWO. As the name suggests, it is used in Bengali currency-related writing where numerator values are represented with dedicated Bengali characters. In practice, you’ll most often encounter ৵ as part of specialized text rendering—such as formatting that distinguishes currency components using numerator characters. If you’re building multilingual content, typography, or data-driven documents, using the exact Unicode character helps ensure correct display and avoids confusion with similar-looking marks. For best results, use UTF-8 encoding and ensure your chosen fonts include this Bengali glyph.
Common uses
- •Displaying Bengali currency numerator values in formatted text
- •Typography and UI labels that must match a specific Unicode character
- •Publishing documents that include Bengali currency notation
- •Rendering currency symbols in multilingual forms and calculators
- •Correct character-by-character display in datasets and exports
Examples
৵ Bengali Currency Numerator Two
- ৵৵ 5/৴ style currency notation
- ৵Use numerator glyph: ৵
- ৵Bengali currency fraction: ৵
- ৵Formatting example text with ৵
- ৵Document snippet containing ৵
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+09F5 | |
| HTML Entity | ৵ | |
| HTML Code | ৵ | |
| CSS | \09F5 |
FAQ
What does the Bengali Currency Numerator Two letter mean?
৵ (Unicode U+09F5) is named BENGALI CURRENCY NUMERATOR TWO. As the name suggests, it is used in Bengali currency-related writing where numerator values are represented with dedicated Bengali characters. In practice, you’ll most often encounter ৵ as part of specialized text rendering—such as formatting that distinguishes currency components using numerator characters. If you’re building multilingual content, typography, or data-driven documents, using the exact Unicode character helps ensure correct display and avoids confusion with similar-looking marks. For best results, use UTF-8 encoding and ensure your chosen fonts include this Bengali glyph.
What Unicode character is ৵?
৵ is Unicode code point U+09F5, named BENGALI CURRENCY NUMERATOR TWO.
How can I copy ৵ for web or documents?
Copy the character directly from this page. You can also use the HTML entity ৵ or the Unicode escapes depending on your environment.
Will ৵ display correctly in my browser?
It should display correctly in UTF-8-capable environments if your font supports U+09F5. If you see a missing-glyph box, try a Bengali-capable font.
Is ৵ the same as a regular numeral “2”?
No. ৵ is a dedicated Bengali currency numerator character (U+09F5), not the standard Bengali numeral two.