Script Ligature Et Ornament Symbol
🙰 is the Script Ligature Et Ornament dingbat used as an ornamental symbol in text and design.
U+1F670
🙰 is a Dingbats emoji with the Unicode name “SCRIPT LIGATURE ET ORNAMENT”. It’s often used to add decorative flair to headings, labels, and typographic compositions.
Script Ligature Et Ornament Symbol Meaning
The symbol 🙰 (Unicode U+1F670) is categorized as a Dingbats character and is named “SCRIPT LIGATURE ET ORNAMENT”. As its name suggests, it functions primarily as a decorative mark rather than a letter or number. Many users treat it like a stylized ornamental separator or flourish in typography, similar to how other ornaments or ligature-like symbols are placed to enhance visual rhythm. You’ll most commonly see it in design mockups, social media captions, and UI text where a small decorative glyph helps break up text blocks and improve presentation without adding new meaning to the sentence.
Common uses
- •Use as an ornamental separator in headings or section titles
- •Add decorative emphasis in invitations, posters, or flyer typography
- •Decorate UI labels or empty-state messages to soften plain layouts
- •Enhance social media captions by breaking up text lines
- •Use in author bios or blog sidebars as a typographic flourish
Examples
🙰 Script Ligature Et Ornament
- 🙰Welcome 🙰 to the studio’s new season
- 🙰Services 🙰 branding, web, and print
- 🙰Meet the team 🙰 crafted with care
- 🙰Limited release 🙰 while supplies last
- 🙰Chapter One 🙰 an introduction
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F670 | |
| HTML Entity | 🙰 | |
| HTML Code | 🙰 | |
| CSS | \1F670 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode name of 🙰?
The Unicode name is “SCRIPT LIGATURE ET ORNAMENT” (U+1F670).
How do I copy 🙰 for use in a website?
Copy the character directly (🙰) or use the HTML entity 🙰.
What does 🙰 mean?
It’s mainly a decorative ornament/ligature-style dingbat used to add visual flair rather than a specific word meaning.
Can I use it in CSS or JavaScript?
Yes. You can use the escapes: CSS \\1F670 and JavaScript \\u{1F670}.