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𦒨

Cjk Unified Ideograph-264A8 Symbol

𦒨 is a CJK ideograph character from the Unicode CJK unified block, used as part of written Chinese/Japanese-style text.

U+264A8

𦒨 is a Unicode CJK unified ideograph identified as U+264A8. It’s primarily used in typed text where the correct character matters, such as digital documents and fonts.

Cjk Unified Ideograph-264A8 Symbol Meaning

𦒨 is a CJK Unified Ideograph, meaning it represents a specific logographic character in the CJK writing system as standardized by Unicode. Because Unicode assigns characters by code point rather than by a universal “meaning” in isolation, the exact sense of 𦒨 depends on the language and the word or text it appears in. In practice, treat it as a precise textual character: it may represent a particular word element, name character, or variant form in source text encoded with this code point.

Common uses

  • Copying and pasting exact CJK characters in documents and notes
  • Using the character in web or app text where U+264A8 must match
  • Labeling or annotating datasets that store original CJK text
  • Referencing the character in typography or font testing
  • Maintaining text fidelity when migrating content between systems

Examples

𦒨 CJK Unified Ideograph-264A8

  • 𦒨Here is the character: 𦒨
  • 𦒨Unicode code point: 𦒨 (U+264A8).
  • 𦒨Copy this exact ideograph: 𦒨
  • 𦒨Text sample includes 𦒨 in its original form.
  • 𦒨Font preview character: 𦒨

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+264A8
HTML Entity𦒨
HTML Code𦒨
CSS\264A8

FAQ

What Unicode character is 𦒨?

𦒨 is the CJK Unified Ideograph at code point U+264A8.

How can I copy 𦒨 exactly?

Copy the character directly from this page (𦒨). For programming or HTML, you can also use 𦒨 or \\u{264A8}.

What does the symbol mean by itself?

As a Unicode ideograph, its specific meaning comes from the language and the word/text it belongs to. Unicode provides the character identity (U+264A8), not a single universal gloss.

Will it display correctly on my device?

Display depends on whether your system and fonts support this code point (U+264A8). If the font lacks coverage, it may not render properly.