One Dot Over Two Dots Punctuation Symbol
⸫ is a specific punctuation character: one dot over two dots (Unicode U+2E2B).
U+2E2B
⸫ (U+2E2B) is a Unicode punctuation character known as one dot over two dots punctuation. It’s mainly used as a typographic mark in specialized text. Use this page to copy it reliably and find similar punctuation characters.
One Dot Over Two Dots Punctuation Symbol Meaning
⸫ is a punctuation symbol from Unicode category “Punctuation,” identified as “ONE DOT OVER TWO DOTS PUNCTUATION” (U+2E2B). Visually, it resembles three dots arranged vertically, with one dot positioned above two dots. In practice, this kind of character is used in text formatting and typographic conventions where a specific dot-based separator or mark is required. Because it’s a specialized punctuation character, it’s most often seen in edited manuscripts, scholarly or typesetting contexts, or when a document uses a particular dot-stack punctuation style. When you need the exact symbol, copy/paste is the most dependable method.
Common uses
- •As a precise separator in specialized typographic layouts
- •In academic or editorial text where dot-based punctuation is required
- •For consistent punctuation styling in typesetting or document templates
- •As a character in precomposed symbols for custom formatting
- •In digital publishing workflows that require Unicode-accurate marks
Examples
⸫ One Dot Over Two Dots Punctuation
- ⸫Wait⸫ please continue.
- ⸫Section 2⸫ Section 3
- ⸫Note A⸫ Note B
- ⸫—⸫—
- ⸫Edited by R. Smith⸫ 2026
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+2E2B | |
| HTML Entity | ⸫ | |
| HTML Code | ⸫ | |
| CSS | \2E2B |
FAQ
What does the One Dot Over Two Dots Punctuation symbol mean?
⸫ is a punctuation symbol from Unicode category “Punctuation,” identified as “ONE DOT OVER TWO DOTS PUNCTUATION” (U+2E2B). Visually, it resembles three dots arranged vertically, with one dot positioned above two dots. In practice, this kind of character is used in text formatting and typographic conventions where a specific dot-based separator or mark is required. Because it’s a specialized punctuation character, it’s most often seen in edited manuscripts, scholarly or typesetting contexts, or when a document uses a particular dot-stack punctuation style. When you need the exact symbol, copy/paste is the most dependable method.